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/qst/ - Quests


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You are…well, you’re not sure who or what you are. There’s a name that appeared in your mind, but it was wrong. Just like everything else that came “before-“ before you awoke here, in the dark, where the only light came from candles, lamps, and the strange upward glow that some caverns and tunnels were cast in the oddly enchanting light of.

When you awoke, you were told what was happening, where you were- that you had been condemned, but were considered for a return, if only you would prove yourself. You’d been left to die- but by the grace of your saviors, you would shake off the old curse of what came before, and become a new man, a new warrior, raised up to fight if you would survive the trials to come. Perhaps not what some wished for, but few received a second chance at life.

With that, order was brought to the chaos of your being, beginning with a name. Erdan Two-Two-Eight. It was a name you would have to learn to respond to, to accept as your own, no matter what remnant of false memory protested. That memory was before, after all- and all that was before was an illusion.

The trials were dangerous. Down here in the depths, you were tasked with maintaining a base. Men from above would come down with ammunition and supplies, and they would go up with wounded and the things you were asked to find. Any who died down here, stayed. Those so wounded they had to go up would return as well- but could not say anything about where they went, as they’d been blindfolded.

So your days began with the duties of patrol, maintaining the outer perimeter of the base, frightening off creatures of the dark using light, sometimes, and other times the simplicity of an air gun or handgun. Some of them were fleshy and able to be hurt with such. Others required stranger methods, such as flame, or scents, or chants and gesticulation. Then came the hunts- more difficult, but you had known your squad well enough at that point to work with them, had drilled with them enough. Then the delves, marching down into the glowing deep, though the light went away when you reached the bottom. The voices that echoed up were louder. It was unpleasant- but you all reminded yourselves, it was your path to redemption.
This outing had been a particularly unpleasant one, as you had had to fend off what were called Shadow Soldiers that had gathered around a strange shell. They were facsimiles of your sort- illusions, supposedly, but their bullets and knives wounded like the real thing, and the only weapon that harmed them were those fired in true hatred. You had all learned to hate, now. Those who were left, who hadn’t either been sent up or left behind, perhaps to become Shadow Soldiers themselves, some theorized. Now though, you and a few members of other squads had gathered around a table with a lamp, rotated off of duties in order to rest. You gambled on cards- though with no money down here, you bartered tea and sugar. The luxuries that you ought to have been consuming.
>>
“Two One One owes me twenty bags,” another Erdan, Two One Three, complained as he laid a confident bet on the table- it was hard to tell expressions with your masks on, but he must have had a good hand of cards. “He took that magazine with him, and I can’t find it in his things. Bet he has it on him now.”

“Maybe we ought to try and sneak out and get it,” a member of that Erdan’s squad murmured, his hand seeming to be a load of crap.

“Sneak out into Shadow territory,” you scoffed, “What sort of magazine could it be to be worth doing that on your own?”

“A girly magazine,” One Three whispered loudly, “One of the supply people gave it to me, said it was for finding that old pot a few outings back. An East Valsten one, beaches and boats.”
Everybody stared. There were no women here. Only sometimes, the small red haired one, who mostly tended to any of the wounded who went up, but sometimes came down here. You felt you ought to know who Maddalyn Von Blum was, but there was…emptiness. Otherwise, as far as females went, there was only the voices- and the dreams.

“Any of them that look like…her?” One of your squad members asked. About the woman that haunted everybody’s memories, sometimes, dreams. All of you knew her…hoped she was real. Searched for images, carved them, scrawled them from memory.

“No,” One Three sighed, “They’re all clean. Unmarked. No harm on their bodies. Still, though.” He looked around. “Call ‘em.”

“Fold.”

“Fold.”

“Fold.”

Half the table folded right there, though you held yours. “Speaking of,” you said, “Any of you have any more…dreams?” She was shared amongst you. She bound you together. All of you wanted to have as much time with her as you could…

One Three clicked his tongue as he reviewed his cards. “No. Not in weeks. It’d be nice to.”

Your squadmate, Two Two Five, hesitated with his answer. “I dreamt that I kissed her.”

That prompted a dismissive scoff from most. Complete bullshit.

“You did not,” another man snapped, more offended rather than dismissive. Not an Erdan- he was a Dieter. “Don’t make up that sort of thing.”

“Like you haven’t thought about it,” Two Two Five snapped back heatedly, “It’s just a dream, not a memory. Or maybe it was, huh? Are you jealous?”

“Shouldn’t think about her that way.” Dieter One One Nine slapped his hands on the table, rocking the bets about.

“Knock it off,” One Three said coolly, “She wants you happy. If that means you jerk it to her once or twice, who cares. Just don’t tell her, right?”

“She watches over us,” the Dieter sat back down, but still sounded mad, “She protects us. When we meet her again, she would know of your impiety…”

“I think she’d like it,” Two Two Five protested, “Who are you dreaming of? Not her, by the sounds-“
>>
“Stop,” you advised your squadmate, who fell quiet. Back to the table, you looked. “Let’s do this.”

You laid your hand down, and so did the other two betters. A twinge of regret, as Two One Three obliterated the other two hands, and he confidently swept up your bets, and the antes from before.

“Heh heh,” One Three laughed to himself, “No teatime for you people. Guess you’ll have to make do with coffee.”

An unthinkable option- none even came down here, so reviled was coffee.

-----

A couple walked hand in hand in the Imperial city of Ysenhof- one was of the Reich’s military, the other, formerly of Halmeggia’s. One was a war hero in his country- the other, a war criminal in hers. One twenty five years old, the other nineteen.

Reinhold and Eidan were on a date for the first time in entirely too long. The fighting in Netilland had wound down after the battle outside their capital- a hell of a scuffle, but Major Reinhold Roth-Vogel had managed to keep his men out of too much trouble. The Ellowians and Netillians had been allowed the honor of kicking the absolute shit out of one another, while his unit had sped about and cut where they could. That war wasn’t over-but it was for him and his people. They left their tanks with Mittelsosalia, and came home, where newer tanks would be waiting for the now blooded troopers.

The KT-30 was a nice machine. Yet Reinhold was nostalgic for his old Luftpanzer II. Ah, to return to those times…they held as much joy as they held bitter tragedy.

The first thing he had done was to go and pay respects to his fallen friend Dolcherr. His best friend. His guardian angel, surely. Whose death was the greatest, most painful regret. Then, his girlfriend. Who he had ambushed in the apartment they cohabited the day before.

“Let’s go to the carnival and get on the great wheel,” Eidan said as she tugged on Reinhold’s hand, “You haven’t been up high in a while, have you?”

“Been seasick plenty,” he replied, “Sure. The one with the closed cars, yeah?”

Eidan half-closed her eyes in a glare. “At least warn me this time.”

“You weren’t against doing dirty stuff in there before,” Reinhold smirked at the Halmeggian girl. “Nothing that won’t rock the thing too much, at least.”

“…I was thinking,” Eidan said as she pulled Reinhold forward, “What if you got me pregnant?”

Reinhold’s smile melted off his face. “You said you were safe.”

“You didn’t ask until after,” Eidan said crossly, referring to the events of the other day, “You didn’t even let me take my clothes off.”

“But it was a safe day?”

“Yes.” Eidan huffed, “But…I don’t know. Are you planning on…marrying me?”
>>
Reinhold’s smirk was now far, far away. “That’s pretty damn fast. What’s got you in a hurry? You’re plenty young.” Maybe too young, to be honest. The subject made him feel a bit dirty, but he had been the one sought out, not the other way around.

“I’m wanted in Halmeggia, Reinhold,” Eidan said uncomfortably, “I’ve heard my father’s enemies have…something. Something they can use to drag me back, and…I don’t know if they can have me sent back.”

“Relax,” Reinhold reached under Eidan’s hair and stroked the nape of her neck, “I’m not intending on letting you go soon.”

She was nonplussed by the affection. “That’s what I mean. Not soon, but, when? The Dhegyar girl got in my face when I was out early today. She thinks she can wait me out.”

“I’ll talk to Linda about it again,” Reinhold sighed, moving to stroke his girl’s hair, grown out some since he’d left before. “Look, I don’t know. That’s still a while away. I just got back. Let’s enjoy ourselves a bit, yeah? I’ve had to deal with enough shit lately. You know exactly how it is.”

“I do know,” Eidan said sharply, “But…I don’t want to be kept waiting. Not with the world like it’s going.”

“I’ll take care of you, honey,” Reinhold tried to reassure her, “Don’t worry about people trying to get you. Nobody’s coming after this man’s girl, current or prior. Don’t you feel trapped with me, you get it?”

“I’m not trapped,” Eidan replied, “Just make up your mind.”

“We’ve got plenty of time.”

“I hope you’re right,” Eidan said as she leaned into his chest.

Reinhold couldn’t help but notice, as he passed some places. The prices of foodstuffs seemed to have crept up again…

-----

The past couple weeks had been a strange mix of labor and relaxation. The preparations for your wedding were there, as well as the organization of the new unit you were to command, but there were plenty of days where you were completely free- days you spent some of on trips, and others, merely reading, with your fiancée either on your lap or pushed up next to you on the same seat, reading something different.

You are Major Richter Von Tracht, and things were…unsettlingly good. Maddalyn had still not opened up to you about anything you were truly concerned about- but she had allowed you into a section of the facilities you were normally barred from. A place for medical treatment- an explanation for why she had to often spend entire days away from you. The answer was treating mysterious wounds of the template soldiers- apparently trained on missions down below the surface. Looking for…whatever could be found.

Wouldn’t soulbinders take exception to this, you had asked Maddalyn. Yes, they would, if they found out, was the answer. However, the depths of the world were not a place where one was likely to encounter those who would interfere with life on the surface.
>>
It still made you uneasy. As did many things. Yet those would have their time.

When Maddalyn had a couple of days to herself- a pause to operations underground, for one reason or another- you took her to see Von Metzeler and his new wife. Unlike last time, she was actually in attendance to your meeting, though Maddalyn asked for her temporary absence when she sensed something, in regards to your queries to ways to aid Von Metzeler in recovering from the condition you had moved past. The aftereffects of having the strange conditioning removed from both of you.

Maddalyn had no answer to that. Yet she did notice an oddity- a mark. Which…she was able to remove.

“You can destroy them?” you asked Maddalyn, skeptically, considering a prior excuse she had used.

“Richter…” she pouted at you and sulked, “Please…”

Fine. No need to badger her over deception she had already apologized for. Though who had marked Von Metzeler- and why? Surely Yva, but the why was unclear. Von Metzeler had no explanation either.

Klaudia Von Schneeberg was unusually quiet- though when she and Maddalyn were together, leaving you and Von Metzeler to one another, Maddalyn told you that she was most certainly not a mute.

Back to the Blumlands within the day. Things proceeded plainly- until four days from the wedding.

For that was when an intrusion into your dreams decided to show itself again.

Once again, falling through a whorl of fog, until you found yourself standing on a sea of nothing,

On one side, the Door of the World’s Memories. You were not told- you simply knew. It glowed harshly, whilst beside it was the Door of Ghosts, which sparkled in darkness like a night sky. Offerings from the Demiphantom- despite it not speaking, not appearing. They called- but you stood still. For did you truly want to see beyond them..?

>Go through the Door of Ghosts. You wanted to find one who had passed…(Who?)
>The Door of the World’s Memories invited you. Despite what had happened last time. Perhaps you could do better this time…(When and Where?)
>Sit on the ground and wait. You were taking no gifts, no offerings, no favors. Naught waited beyond those doors that you needed to see or hear.
>Other?
>>
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Pastebin for past threads- https://pastebin.com/UagT0hnh
Twitter for announcements and shitposts is @scheissfunker

I rendered out all the swimsuit drawings- full size versions are on the twitter, but for those allergic to such sites, I'm putting all four here.
Sorry about being so late with the thread- took a while to get back into the drive of things, but we should be all hands on deck now.
>>
>>5352914
>Other?
Talk with the demiphantom.
>>
>>5352912
>Yet Reinhold was nostalgic for his old Luftpanzer II
>nostalgic for Luftpanzer
>LUFTPANZER II
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

>>5352918
>correct Pact
This is where we vote, right?

>>5352914
>Sit on the ground and wait. You were taking no gifts, no offerings, no favors. Naught waited beyond those doors that you needed to see or hear.
If someone makes a good argument for one of the others, I'll change my vote. For now, I'll stick with caution.
>>
>>5352914
>Sit on the ground and wait. You were taking no gifts, no offerings, no favors. Naught waited beyond those doors that you needed to see or hear.
The last time we played with the doors, it turned into a mess with Richter getting possessed. We were also warned not to do this kind of thing again, and the Demiphantom is decidedly hostile to us. I want nothing to do with these shenanigans, we don't need these tainted services.
>>
>>5352914
>Other?
Let's snoop around the emptiness for any signs of a note back from Uncle Hell.
>>
>>5352914
>>Go through the Door of Ghosts. You wanted to find one who had passed…(Need to go visit Hell while we still can.)
>>
>>5352914
>Sit on the ground and wait. You were taking no gifts, no offerings, no favors. Naught waited beyond those doors that you needed to see or hear.
>>
>>5352926
Have a chat with this thing with many faces and none.

>>5352948
>>5352983
>>5353122
Wait it out. These portals are traps.

>>5353002
Look around- see if anybody's trying to talk.

>>5353022
Look for Hell. Maybe you'll find it. Him.

Writing.

>>5352948
>>LUFTPANZER II
>NOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Technically Luftpanzer Quest was in actuality Luftpanzer II quest. The Luftpanzer One was an experiment that was phased out in favor of the more versatile Two, since rather than having proper tank cannon, it used a heavy machine gun and had a crew of two. A much more primitive platform with the focus on seeing what it took to make a tank air-mobile.
Their primary use has been as test platforms for ADR and potential parachute deployment rather than seeing any battle.
>>
“No thanks,” you sat down cross-legged the best you could while standing on nothing. It was easy as long as you didn’t look down to see what was going on. “You’ll need to bait me better than that.” You could wait this out. You’d take no gifts, no offerings, no favors from this alien creature. It was trapped- you knew it was. You’d gone and inspected its prison, and everything was secure and safe…and should be, for however long Poltergeist took to decide to actually claim this thing, hopefully sooner rather than later. “You hear me out there?” You tried to engage the demiphantom, perhaps it would speak to you instead of tempting.

No response.

“Hello? Well of Souls, or whatever you are?”

Nothing.

“Then keep your secrets,” you scowled, and looked around. Last you deigned to speak to ghosts, you tried to let a note to the entirely imaginary wind, hoping it would find your long passed uncle, when you had decided to stay with Viska instead of pursuing him. Perhaps, if he was in this void, and what you did had more meaning than pretend..?

After getting up and looking around, you weren’t surprised, but were disappointed, to find nothing besides the swirl of muted color and cloud that was all around. Though, you did find…you were moving away from the doors. They always faced you, but you could retreat from them.

This attempt to both search and draw away yielded no fruit, but when the world fell away again, you could at least take comfort that you would wake up yourself, rather than anybody else…

-----
>>
The wheel of history continues to turn.

War continues north of the Archduchy, as Almizea and Plisseau each fail to gain the easy and swift victory imagined. Conflict begins to come to a close, as the capital of Netilland, Berkesseburg, is taken first by an Ellowian Exile offensive, and then forced out by Netillian Republicans. A ceasefire is arranged between the two parties after the swift and bloody days, but both continue to fight against the waning Militarists. The Twaryians grow stronger, their armies preparing, but not on the wary border of the Ellowian Kingdom, whose new king now meets with the Republic in exile, whose weary army still prepares for more fighting as they march towards a home they would not recognize.

The Republic of Mittelsosalia issues an ultimatum to the free territories to its east- the remnants of old Sosaldt. Join the Republic willingly, or be made to capitulate under force of arms. Many do. Many decide to resist, despite the Republic’s reputation. The new conflict is not called a war- though those fighting in it could claim it one.

In the Archduchy, a call to assemble the a Council of Territories is made, in light of discontent with decisions made by the Capital and labors exerted by the Territories that have not seen them rewarded. Discontent murmurs through the halls of the assembly hall, as the Archduke fails to attend. His ministers have taken his place, as the highest authority of the land bathes and carouses with young women at a heated spring, one nubile lady far more cunning than he might assume…

-----

April 10th, 1933

It was dark, early morning in Blumsburgh. The sky was dark blue, the stars anticipating the approach of the sun, and fading, save for bright point of Himinfor, the far off cosmic morning torch. Another world, you had read- like Hvrgull, shining more dully earlier in the past night. What was there? Perhaps it would be discovered someday.

For now, though, your concerns were not how early it was, nor what might be in the sky. Your concerns were rooted solely to Velekam, for today was particularly special. You are Richter Von Tracht, and today was your wedding day.

“This is silly,” you grumbled to your crew from atop the m/32, “I should have thought about how much grease and oil is all over this heap of metal.”

“It’s tradition,” Hans said through the intercom, “If a woman don’t like grease and oil she doesn’t love a tanker.”

“I don’t think most women like being awakened by cannon fire, either,” Stein said, off the tank intercom but within your hearing.
>>
“There’s a few, maybe,” you allowed with a sigh, “I don’t think Maddalyn is one, but…” Tradition. Having to pursue your bride and escort her to the ceremony was not quite Strossvald tradition in this region of the country rather than further east- but hunting her down at the crack of dawn and waking her up with gunfire was. One could argue you’d already done this part, but…well, it was less lighthearted back then.

Hans and Stein were, thankfully, not at each other’s throats. A long enough time away had helped- and you’d celebrated their return to your service a few nights ago by going out. Though that same night was also when another tradition reared its head- you and Maddalyn would be separated for three days before your wedding day. Partially to facilitate this ritual of “abducting” her, though Hans speculated that it was meant to get the two of you hot and bothered for the actual night after.

“Let’s get going,” you said to your crew, “If we find her quickly enough maybe I won’t be stained too badly.”

“Raring to go, eh, boss?” Hans laughed, “Just don’t tear her apart as soon as we do, eh?”

…There wasn’t an rule against that…

“Paet the aedea en ‘as haed,” Jorgen snickered.

“Driver, forward,” you quickly said, “It’s time we rendezvous with our reinforcement..”

After all. This was battle- and you would be using every advantage for perfect victory. Little point in bringing this particular gun to wake up the bride with if you couldn’t find her by the time the sun crept up. So despite you and your fiancée’s separation, you’d managed to rig the trial, so no matter where she’d been “hidden” away- she would not be waiting long for you to sweep in and capture her again, while also able to execute the evidently important ceremony of an extremely rude awakening.

>What allies have you called to this battle? Mind you- they must be capable of actually attending.
>>
>>5353280
I wanna just cry out "Everyone! All the warriors!"
But the Maddalyn Retrieval arc crew (Rondo, Krause, Walen, ect) should be more than good enough, if not a bit over kill.
>>
>>5353280
>the Maddalyn Retrieval arc crew
This is a pretty good idea, brings things full circle. Very thematic.
>>
>>5353298
+1, end this arc how it started
>>
>>5353298
>>5353341
>>5353374
Wrapping this up the way it began.

Writing.
>>
In as much of an engineering of fate as you could muster, the band you pulled to yourself was made up of the same tankers and officers as had come with you on your initial journey to get Maddalyn last year- who had marched, fought, shouldered the burden of doing the IO’s bidding with you. Not all of them were there- Von Walen’s crew had passed, and not all of the members of the section of Bat Company were either, but the latter in particular had made the bar crawl two nights ago a joyful stumble of reminiscence.

Captain Honnrieg’s gruff, stony look had lightened upon looking at your eyes (after your new shocking visage, though he didn’t seem too repelled), shaking your hand.

“Well I’ll be,” he marveled, “You don’t got the look anymore. A different one, if you don’t mind me sayin’.”

“It’s a long story.” A long story that by now had been told- if not every part of it, and not where everyone could hear.

Von Neubaum had sent ahead that he would be late. Every other man seemed relieved by this, for some reason, as though they knew a different man than you.

“He isn’t late,” Von Igel had said- he was a man of few words, and what he had to say had become more complaints or criticism than anything. Not a man glad to be around the rest of you- but something must have compelled him to attend anyways. Quite honestly, you couldn’t remember much about him to suggest he’d been different before. “He’ll arrive for the prestige of it. Leave us all after. He’d say he’s moved on, if you cornered him.”

“No he hasn’t,” Von Walen snorted, “Not unless he’s set on taking another trip out of the country. He just knows we’re both here. Won’t be suffered to be with us.”

“With you, rather,” Von Igel corrected as he pushed his round glasses atop his round nose, whose shape made the eyepiece’s slipping a matter of if, not when.

Von Walen rolled his eyes and crossed his arms. Nobody here called him by his new preferred title. Not even the enlisted, which seemed to annoy him, but not as much as the subject of Von Neubaum.

“He seemed normal enough to me,” Honnrieg yawned, bored by the contentions of the youth, “Somethin’ change over there, or later?”

“Yeah, actually,” Honnrieg’s right hand man, at least amongst those present, raised a finger, “Heard he went out and did things in Von Tracht’s name, got up to all sorts of things, came back with a bunch of loose women. He had a different step since, I’d say.”

“There you go,” Honnrieg clapped his hands together, “Women change a man, don’t they, mister man of the day?”

…That could be said of a few different ones, you thought, feeling the numbness of the burn on your face, and the line of the scar of a knife on your right hand.

“So none of the rest of us get tanks, then?” Von Walen interrupted.
>>
“Only the husband is supposed to wake up the spouse,” Von Metzeler pointed out, “And with the city preparing to throw all of their parties to take advantage of the Lord’s festivities, the streets are in no condition to drive armored beasts through.”

“Bah.”

“More importantly,” Von Igel grumbled, “The one making an impression should be the man getting married.”

“With that in mind,” Von Metzeler looked to Krause, “You have been observant lately, yes, Frederick?”

“The Bat Company boys and I, sure,” the mustached man said with a flick of a spent cigarette, “It seems unlikely. If she was hiding out in the city, we’d have seen some attendants or somebody shady getting stuff and taking it back, and the bodyguards creeping about. It’s nice to see considering how we first got here, but I wouldn’t be surprised if Von Blum bribed all the petty criminals and troublemakers to lay off for the week.”

“Then you’ll only have to comb where you haven’t kept a keen eye,” you said. Blumsburgh was a big city, after all. To properly look over all of it might require a whole company, even with the men here being plenty capable and doing their best. “Everybody remember their sectors?” Nods all around. “Good. We have three hours, three and a half at best. I expect our finest performance. Let’s go.”

Reasonably, you’d have more. Maddalyn was a heavy, late sleeper. The more people that woke up to see you struggling, though, the worse it looked.

Thankfully, fortune was on your side. Or perhaps skill. Within two hours, one of Von Neubaum’s crewmen had reported finding a cottage in the woods, suspiciously guarded by blue coated Von Blum guardsmen. To be fair, the intent was for you to find her in the first place- you just needed enough eyes to do it quickly. Off you raced, north, for the woods north of the city by the grand river that divided the city further downstream.

“Make sure you have the blank loaded,” you urged Jorgen, who replied with something dismissive and rude. “Point the gun in the air,” you told Stein next.

“It already is,” Stein complained, “It hasn’t been that long.”

“Sorry,” you adjusted your cap, the Silver Lances uniform one that you found you preferred. Its metal plate instead of the horsehair tuft was regarded as “cooler.” “I just don’t want to stumble when the final meter is right ahead.”

“Boss,” Jorgen patted your shoulder, “Raelax. Baenger all taensed ahp aend yae’ll baest eaerly.”

“…Noted,” you said, despite not asking for any advice. “…We’re here, looks like.”
>>
In the woods, early morning sunlight dappling the floor of the woods, there stood a squad of blue coated guards, some you recognized from before. Maddalyn’s personal guard, and a car with a long back and a covered roof, meant for luxurious transport. Their sergeant saluted to you and nodded, then looked warily at the tank.

“You ought to cover your ears,” you warned, clearing your throat.

“You’re shooting…” the sergeant said slowly,

“With the tank cannon, yes,” you said, “Thirty seconds.” You kept an eye on your watch, listened to every tick. It wasn’t too far out in the country here- the bustle of the city was faintly audible, the nearby town sometimes contributing to the soft noise. Hardly a place where the wilderness was truly present, but a place of beauty nevertheless. “Gunner. Fire!”

KPOW!!

The blast echoed through the trees, scattering birds, and all the sound from the town hushed for but a moment, before they presumably remembered the tank that had come through some minutes before.

“…Yes,” the Sergeant brushed himself off from the dust kicked up, “Lady Von Blum is…very much expected to be awake. Will you lead the train back, then?”

He referred to turning your tank right around, looking away until Maddalyn had gotten dressed and entered her car, and then driving to the marriage offices. The muddled up traditions stated a strange irony- you were expected to capture your wife, but to not look at her either, until the ceremony. Apparently the ceremonial capture was not often accompanied with a ceremony of marriage, but only the party. However, there was to be a western style ceremony, with the white dress as a symbol of entering a new life with naught behind, so the veil Maddalyn would have been wearing the past days to ward evil spirits would remain on her until that moment, and you would not lay your eyes upon her until then either.

Nevermind that Maddalyn could probably handle herself against evil spirits- you had grown superstitious enough not to tempt any, no matter how benign.
>>
As tempting as it was to tell tradition, and the guards, to stand down while you busted the door down and made up for the past three days of separation.
Driving back to the city and the marriage office to make the legal side ready, it became apparent that Blumsburgh had fully woken and was immediately anticipating hospitality to trickle down from the ceremony up on the hill, even though it wouldn’t begin until noon. They were right to assume it- though plenty of street salesmen and stores were already wringing the wallets of what must have been many fresh tourists with their own brand of hospitality. Your tank was looked upon with awe and confusion, until the decoration of the cars following behind made it clear the import of your convoy.

You’d not been in a military parade yet, but the flattery from the common folk was something you weren’t used to despite having been used to military fame now. You tilted your cap down and shrank slightly in the turret, hoping for the traffic and crowds to part faster so you could get this part done with.

It took very little time once you had arrived. As the documents stated, you and Maddalyn would be legally wed at two o’clock on this day of April Tenth, the Nineteen hundred and thirty third year since the landing of Sversk the Conqueror and the dawn of the Judge’s light upon this continent. You tried to make as lovely a signature as you could- but your right hand was still somewhat clumsy, and your handwriting never that good. It came out tolerable, and that was the best you could ask for. Maddalyn would complete her part out of your sight- and you were urged to depart in a hurry. After all- she had plenty more to do. The final adjustments to a wedding dress, you’d been told, weren’t made until hours before the ceremony.

Meanwhile, the hours before the ceremony were meant to be passed with your honor guard, of sorts. Whom you had assembled here.

Once you’d gotten the m/32 back to its place of honor at the Von Blum Villa, the city would surely be biting its nails, waiting to receive the day’s man of honor…

>Have breakfast, and brunch, finally. Waking up scared up an appetite, and the finger food at the wedding wouldn’t be available for some hours.
>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
>Head back to the Villa, the Manor, and prepare and groom yourself with the time you had left. Uptight perhaps, but you never liked cities much anyways.
>Other?
Also-
>Anything to talk with your people about?
>>
>>5353535
>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
>>
>>5353535
>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
Time to have Richter bumble fuck his way through some "contests of skill".
Since it hasn't been stated, I doubt Richter actually made time to practice his fighting OR his shooting, but we'll see how it goes.
>>
>>5353535
>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
>>
>>5353535
>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
What we lack in skill, we may make up for in luck.
>>
>>5353535
>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
>>
>>5353535
>Head back to the Villa, the Manor, and prepare and groom yourself with the time you had left. Uptight perhaps, but you never liked cities much anyways.
>>
>>5353535
>>Head to one of the fairs that had sprung up. The people of the city wanted to see you- it would be good for you and your men to put on a show at some of the contests there.
Yes, let us deign to grace the common folk with our glorious presence on this day, to demonstrate our boundless kindness and generosity, although it's doubtful that they deserve it.
>>
>>5353557
>>5353593
>>5353634
>>5353677
>>5353824
>>5353906
Go to the fair and be a star, for what it's worth.

>>5353866
Keep away from the rabble.

Writing.

>>5353593
>Since it hasn't been stated, I doubt Richter actually made time to practice his fighting OR his shooting, but we'll see how it goes.
Shooting can be practiced in spare time, but his combat mentor has not been present.
Unless you'd like to engage in the sort of training barely comprehensible foreign fighters prefer, and their thighs don't taste as good.
>>
You decided to loose yourselves and your men on the local festivities, already bustling, but not as busy as they were sure to get. Today was a big day only starting for most, after all.

The assumption of traditional games of a place called the Blumlands being centered around flowers was correct- Maddalyn had told you about them in the past days, when she was telling you what to expect, even though she was a recluse. So the fair you and your men went to had little that was a surprise- flower arrangement competition, flower tea, candied flowers, wreath and bouquet contests where the objectives were both sight and scent, though all of those were feminine activities. More catered to the many present men were the standard expectations such as eating contests, boxing and fencing, the latter a showier, not-bloody sort where the contestants were heavily suited in padded armor and decorated masks, looking more like show performers in dance than men attacking each other with swords. Marksmanship contests that were the excuse of both local and far ranging shootists to show off to a crowd in a way that was likely not safe in the clearing close to the southern reach of the city, but that all were impressed with.

Given that your personal (secondary) goal was of making a show for the people attended, indirectly, to see your marriage (or at least benefit from its happening), you wanted to make a solid attendance at one or more of these contests. They would happen throughout the day, but if you made a good milestone, all would see your contribution, the stick that you measured up to. Frankly, you wouldn’t be doing well in any boxing or shooting, and the prospect of stretching your stomach in some ill advised eating contest this early in the day was not as appealing as it might have been some days in Netilland. Your close combat teacher had been away making ready to attend officer training, as far as you knew, and Jorgen and Malachi’s idea of training was more like learning to fend off tigers. Needless to say, you understood their methods about as well as their New Nauk.

One contest that would have seen you near the top was one for cleaning a deer as quickly as possible, but adding blood and offal to the oil and grease would have been boneheaded even for you.

So, it was down to three. Mountain Castle, a mock-reenactment where a towering pile of blocks challenged participants to do as what was once done on the Imperial Gate, where garrisons holding out from both sides had to be fed by brave “goats” who carried loads of supply up and down treacherous cliffs. This was much more safe, but no less a trial of strength and speed. The heavier your load, the faster you went, the better your score. Then Pestweed, which took more irritating sorts of flowers and challenged those who dared to endure them without sneezing, wheezing, or collapsing. Not one you looked forward to, but nothing compared to what you’d been through before, frankly.
>>
Then, an odd one. Baolesson’s Death. Apparently, a local folk tale about how a past king of the realm, or a governor for Nauk Imperial, some indeterminate time in the past depending on who was asked, had a warrior who was sentenced to be beaten one hundred times for an affront to a superior. However, he was respected or feared by his fellow soldiers, so a scheme was hatched. The “executioner” instead summoned one hundred women and girls, whose strikes would be sure to be unable to kill the powerful man. It worked- until one woman turned out to be a scorned lover, and she struck him with a poisoned needle in a ring, which killed the titular warrior Baolesson. There would be no poisoned rings here, hopefully- but it was half a test of endurance, and half one of looks. After all, getting struck endlessly by women was still not pleasant, but if you were attractive in appearance, as the figure in the tale was, a lady was meant to hold back. The more in the long line who whacked the participant before he surrendered or were put on his knees, the better. Thankfully, nothing was allowed below the beltline or above the collar. No surprise black eyes for the ceremony.

“The last doesn’t seem fair for you, boss,” Hans said, “Not all of us can just put on a mask and set hearts aflutter with mystery.”

“Because every woman would just slug you in the face,” Stein said. “Same with Jorgen. Mal has the best advantage of any of us.”

“Don’t be a dick, I bet he’s pretty under there,” Hans gestured to Malachi, “Not as good as One-Arm, though. Bigger and broader than our Major. Sorry, boss. Not seeing you winning this one.”

“You’re assuming everybody is even entering,” you said, “Some of these aren’t to the tastes of some men.” Though everybody had been let loose to enjoy the fair until it was time to head back.

“Gaed Laeck,” Jorgen pounded a palm on your shoulder, “Daen thraeet yaer baeck ‘faer shorte does.”

That would be bad. The husband was also, traditionally, meant to not let his new wife’s feet touch the ground until they returned to their home. Or at least until they left the ceremony grounds. Good fortune that carrying Maddalyn was much like carrying a housecat as far as weight strain went.

>Roll 3 sets of 1d100. In order, you’ll be doing Mountain Castle, Pestweed, and Baolesson’s Death. Higher is better. If you have any tactics, they can be added onto the roll, or somebody else’s roll, and they will be considered for improving your score.
>>
Rolled 4 (1d100)

>>5354513
>>
>>5354514
Oof.
That's not a good look.
>>
Rolled 57 (1d100)

>>5354513
>>
Rolled 30 (1d100)

>>5354513
>>
>>5354532
Since the roll is meh do the opposite; take off the mask and scare the women away before they consider whacking Richter
>>
>>5354582
I don't think it'll work that way, and it'll definitely reduce our image otherwise if we do.

I think we just lose in each of these, maybe we might win Pestweed simply because our ridiculous gained tolerance for unpleasant sensations, but I don't know how you could possibly strategize to win that.
>>
Should we redeem ourselves by stripping to our underclothes and cleaning a deer as quickly as we possibly can?
>>
>>5354513
Well that is certainly an array of rolls. For strategy I would say in Mountain castle go for a lighter load moved more quickly up the mountain. Our roll was bad but that may not preclude others biting off more than they can chew and not getting up at all.
For Pestweed, the best thing may just be to breathe through the mouth and avoid as much irritant getting in the nose. I imagine it would be easier to fight a cough than a sudden sneeze.
I would say keep the mask on but if a woman seems to be about to really let Richter have it for some reason ask for a moment to collect yourself and take the mask off and just cover the scars with a hand. I wouldn't want to scare them but only a hand to cover the scars should give a hint about the terrible scar underneath and hopefully garner some more sympathy at best, pity at worst. I do worry a bit about any knock on social implications or rumors but a scar on a military man is not exactly the most scandalous thing to have there be talk about.
>>
>>5354601
After the wedding maybe, but even then, that's hardly a dignified look. Maybe we just contend with messing up our clothes.
>>
>>5354604
The third is a really weird move, I don't know why we're trying to play the scar angle, it's not going to do anything. You don't get to "collect yourself" when going through a line of people beating you, and you're assuming someone is just going to have "that look in their eye" that they're going to go hard on us. The first 2 suggestions are alright though.
>>
>>5354609
The mask idea in my mind was to let Richter take the blows normally if possible, but I want to at least have something to do to mitigate if the women really start laying in on him. Maybe you won't be able to judge intentions well enough to tell with one person, but say a couple people in a row get some good hits in for whatever reason that may be a signal to try and switch strategies.
>>
>>5354605
Maybe there's a clothing store nearby we can buy a cheap shirt and pair of pants from? Or commandeer some clothes from one of our followers if absolutely necessary. That's what they're there for, right?
>>
>>5354923
not a bad idea, but again, would probably be for after the wedding
>>
>>5354946
I have a feeling we might be too busy working with a different kind of meat after the wedding.
>>
Apologies for being late, but I'm gonna be even later. Update will come soon after I get back from work.
Don't get too down about not doing well, though. After all, the roll that matters more is still in the future.
>>
>>5355052
>After all, the roll that matters more is still in the future.
START ROLLING TO MAKE BAYBEES
>>
Firstly, you took on the mountain. As much of one as it was. The height was impressive, but rather than stone, it was made of bales of cloth and straw, so that anybody falling down would be entertainment rather than a tragedy. Fall down many did- as it was common to overburden oneself and make their body clumsy by extension.

A mistake you wouldn’t repeat. You’d load yourself light as possible, which turned out to be wise, as something was making you shockingly flat footed as you struggled up each block, trying to be the swiftest if not the most powerful. Despite every preparation in your favor, it was still a baffling ordeal, and in your hurry to end it quickly you managed to bound over the top…and fall right down the other side, rolling down half the mountain before picking yourself up, having to climb back up to see where your mask fell off, and then dejectedly making your way down again. Yes, you’d reached the top in your go, but it most certainly was nothing impressive.

Oh well. Enough people failed to get to the top at all from overconfidence, but if you had gone with anything but a light load you would have shared that indignity. You’d do better later- else it might seem that this union was frowned upon.

Pestweed was not any trial of strength, which was good for a body that had just tumbled up and down even the mild obstacle of a fake and soft mountain, and a more familiar one besides that. Jumping up and down cliffs like a rock buzzard had not been part of your youth or hobbies, but pollen season certainly was, as was the acrid smoke of the inner capital. You had more confidence taking on this botanical artifice of irritation, especially when you saw the array of them and were relieved to see nothing that was mildly poisonous or a skin irritant.

So long as you didn’t have your nasal passages intruded upon, you could stifle a sneeze, and force down a cough, no matter how watery your eyes got.

Succumbing was inevitably, as flowers and tufts were scoured across your face like you were being scrubbed for a bath, but between you starting and ending, several men had been defeated despite starting minutes after you, so despite feeling like you’d come down with a sudden flower flu, you felt rather good about yourself. For now, you had done the best. It wouldn’t last, but it made up for your earlier botch.
“Onwards,” you declared with a throat full of phlegm, having washed your face off.

“Er,” Stein coughed, “Are you sure? You look like one of those red and pink flowers there.”

“The pleasant scents might help me,” you said, “I’m feeling the momentum of victory. It’ll wear off. If I look better as time goes on, perhaps I’ll have to weather less after my toughness is spent.”

“They’re city girls, boss,” Hans said dismissively, “I don’t think most of them would hit somebody as hard as they could, even if that would do anything. Unless there were anybody like Karla here.”
>>
You cringed as you expected Stein to not take kindly to any mention of his sister, but instead, he nodded. “You can’t discount a strong armed woman out of every few hundred. Maybe a farmer or woodworker’s daughter blew in.”

“Those what you’re hoping to see, Stein?” Hans challenged.

“Could do a lot worse.”

“How about huntresses?” You tested. It fooled nobody.

After signing into the event, your turn came up, though you observed first- and thought you recognized a few people from the Silver Lances, though not from your platoon, certainly from your company. You’d told the organizers of your day to invite all they could from that unit, though you had doubts as to how many would attend given the uncertainty of when their next deployment was. It’d be harder to tell as well, given that these particular men were out of uniform.

“Tough competition,” Stein said, “Though they’re rougher looking.”

That prompted a hollow laugh from you. “No need for flattery. I’ll just roll the dice on not being sized up by any farmhand women.” Taking off your mask to elicit pity was an option, but part of your calculations was hindered by your undeniable sense of pride.

You’d managed twenty nine women when a twist occurred. Most of them held their strike- though most did seem to be middle aged, and you were admittedly young, so it had the feeling of mothers holding back a slap on a child. Though the feistier young women did smile at you before giving you a solid whack on the chest.

Nothing had gone against expectations, and you felt you could handle more, plenty more. Then the shift in fortunes.

How many women wore uniforms, you wondered as a blue blur came bounding up.

“Grit those teeth, pretty boy!”

WHOCK.

It caught you completely off guard- nobody had decided to sink their fist right into your middle with a running leap, and you stumbled back, sinking to a knee and groaning.

“Oh, suck it up,” came the mocking nasally voice, “If I really wanted it to hurt I would’a used my foot.”

“I’m ever so thankful,” you grumbled as you felt that blow’s true depth and toppled onto your arse, “Judge Above, I didn’t think you could hit that hard…”

“If I didn’t hit you as hard as I could,” Anya said, “I couldn’t knock you down, could I? Isn’t that the point?”

“The point is…” you wheezed, and accepted the hand that extended to pull you up, “You’re supposed to pull your fist if you like the way I look…”

“That’s dumb. How’re you s’posed to remember however many girls hit you with half-assed punches?” Anya stretched her able arm over her head, “Besides, you already know you look good. You sort of took that like a bitch. You wanna second try? I’ll let y’punch me first, if y’want.”

“That’s not how it works either,” you said with a sigh as you left to keep this spectacle from holding things up.
>>
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“Can I get back in line then?” She referred to going to punch more men. You wouldn’t object. It would help your chances, because Anya wouldn’t hold back on anybody, you bet.

“Stay a moment,” you got a chance to size up Anya’s new apparel. She wore a different uniform now- a cadet’s jacket, which was identical to an officer’s save for the blank rank insignia on the throat. The condition of her arm meant she couldn’t wear it properly- an allowance made for injuries. What wasn’t an allowance was the shirt she wore underneath, one of several options in and of itself, but it was predictably worn improperly, though the Silver Shield of Roland was pinned where it ought to be when it couldn’t be on the jacket. “Folding your shirt up is out of regulation.” Not said out of any actual admonishment, but you had to hit back somehow.

“I’m not gonna be at school ‘til the end of the month anyways. You complainin’?” Not particularly, but there was the principle of the matter. As you stepped out of the boundaries of the event, she reached up to toy with her hair. “Though…y’know. How do I look?”

That made you squint at her. “I think you know what I think.”

“No, I mean, how d’you think I look, to other guys? Maybe they’d like it better if I wore it like the book.”

Ah. She was on the hunt. “What sort of other guys?”

Anya frowned at you. “You know.”

“…Are you sure he’ll be here?” You asked Anya carefully, “You know that-“

“He’ll be here.” Anya said with a curt bite that invited no debate, even if you had no idea how that was possible to be certain of.

Perhaps you could help her with other options, though, in case assumptions were wrong.

>How does she look? From the perspective of anybody she’d be interested in, of course…
>Other things?
>>
>>5355440
I don't think our Ellowian friend will be disappointed.
>>
>>5355440
Her hair is nice and fluffy and her abs strong, she looks good. Not as good as Richter's bride will be, of course, but still very nice.
Surely any red blooded young man, let alone the one she seeks, would be happy to try and romance her, and Richter will have to play the role of elder siblings and fight them off so they could prove their worth, before the real challenge of fighting Anya herself arose.
>>
>>5355440
If a man doesn't appreciate a good midriff he doesn't deserve Anya anyway.
Also, that pose with that out-of-sleeves coat looks quite badass.
>>
>>5355440
I get that keeping her shirt up is a habit that will be hard to kill if she even wants to, but honestly, to answer her question, I think she would look better with the shirt down for her uniform. Otherwise, yes, she looks quite good, anyone should be able to tell even without the abs that she's tough, and the person she probably has in mind wouldn't question it anyways. I think it would definitely help her chances to show she knows how to be modest as well as kick ass.
>>
>>5355440
>How does she look? From the perspective of anybody she’d be interested in, of course…
Indeed green text, indeed.
She looks like a stone cold badass, stands out from anyone in this crowd. When he first sees her, all she'll have to do is let her feelings show through her smile, he won't be able to look away. No one could.

Goddammit tanq, why you got drop her looking cute as fuck right before Richter gets married?
>>
>>5355440
>How does she look? From the perspective of anybody she’d be interested in, of course…
She certainly looks storied. Dressed like a cadet but already decorated, with a scarred face, broken arm, and bared midriff. There may have been room for misunderstanding in who exactly owns the cadet jacket, but the Shield of Roland only makes sense being there if it is hers, so why humble yourself with the cadet jacket unless it is hers as well.

I do like the midriff but she should be wearing the uniform properly by the time the wedding really starts kicking off of course.
>>
>>5355440
She looks very dashing
>>
>>5355473
>>5355543
>>5355638
Have confidence in that body.

>>5355659
Put your shirt down, the people you're into already know what's under it.

>>5355695
>>5355708
>>5355909
It's all in how you stand out.

Writing.

>>5355695
>spoiler
>>5355362
Some rolls are poorly timed.
>>
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“I doubt any red blooded man could resist you,” you said frankly, “No man would turn down a girl with a strong center like yours. Or a head as fluffy.”

Anya frowned and stroked her hair. “Y’think I oughta grow it more? I mean…”

She was usually so confident about her appearance. “You don’t believe me when I say you look good? I have excellent vision. I’ll say that anybody who disagrees likely has poor eyesight.” Not as pretty as Maddalyn, but that wasn’t what was asked.

“No, I,” Anya stuttered most uncharacteristically, “Y’know. That’s not everything, right?”

“Of course not. You stand out. You look tough, storied. Decorated with scars and clothing alike. Well earned pride. Though I think if you’re looking for people who already know you,” you prodded her stomach with a finger, “We already know how good this looks. For some, a respect towards decorum is as desirable as that tone is. You don’t need to show everything you’re proud of. Besides, I’d appreciate you being in proper dress for the ceremony.”

Anya still seemed strangely uncertain. “Would somebody else like that better, though..?”

“If they think less just because your face is all that’s on display then they probably prefer men anyways,” you made a declaration that could be controversial, “And shouldn’t be somebody you should think of attracting. Anybody you do draw, I’ll be sure to judge them first. My retinue only deserves the best. A proper older brother’s role.”

That last part had slipped out, and Anya squinted, then smirked. “You’re the older sibling? I don’t think so. If anybody is, I’m the big sister.”

“You’re rather short to be a big sister,” you shot back.

“I’m older than you, I bet,” Anya said. Though since her own age was a guess at best, she could easily extend the range over whatever you said. “You’re an only child, I actually have a little sister.” She reached up and pinched your cheek. “Cute how you’re gonna keep all the chaff away, huh?”

“My pride won’t suffer less for you,” you said.
>>
For some reason, Anya’s smile diminished, weighing whether to say something. “Nah, you’re doing fine,” she decided with a sigh, “I appreciate it. I really do. I ought’a know better, but…’s hard to know sometimes. What I like, and what other people like better. Sometimes guys aren’t like I…figure. Anyways. Join me in line, with your guys, I wanna punch more people for nothin’.”

“There’s more to do,” you said, “Wander around with them a bit, this contest isn’t going anywhere.”

“Then I’m gonna do what I know you can’t do back today,” Anya said with a smirk, as she smacked you right on the bottom with a loud whap.

“Anya,” you said in exasperated warning, “There are people…”

“Don’t get your panties in a bunch,” Anya shoved her hand in a pocket, “You’re not gonna be the only one, if I have my way.”

-----

After some rounds of contest spectating, including seeing just how deep an appetite a Yaegir could muster if given an excuse and just how mighty your driver really was in regards to bearing loads, everybody had gathered at the gates to the manor, just ten minutes before they were to open and admit all directly invited. One hundred feet away though, local vendors and performers were plying their trade, having fought mercilessly in the past days to reserve places for the highest paying clientele.

Anya had been hanging around Honnrieg, who was advising her in her posture and the particular fit of her uniform. She didn’t give the older officer any backtalk that was the normal- her shirt was properly folded down, straightened, and her shoulders were squared and her neck straightened more than you’d seen in a while. A cloud of worry was still in her eyes, as she glanced about every so often.

She had spoken of it as though it were nothing, but the news was a shock to you when it was shared with the crew. Anya had gone back to Ellowie over the past couple of weeks, but had returned here no worse for wear, even claiming to have “found” another piece of armor that had been appropriated in the field. As much as you would object to her adventuring again with a broken arm, she did insist to you that she had been as careful as she could be, since she had to attend this wedding. All she wanted was to ensure that there would be other guests.

Yet they weren’t in attendance yet, from what you could see.

“So she’s hot for the girly haired guy, huh,” Stein scratched his chin, “Thought she was into the more manly type.”

“You’re saying that after Fluffy grabbed your ass like she did?” Hans jabbed your gunner, “You’re not a monument to masculinity yourself, fat cheeks.”

Stein pinkened around the cheeks. “I can’t believe you remember that…”

“She never got grabby with me” Hans said in mock dejection. “Hey, boss. You got a ramrod up your bum?”
>>
“It’s my wedding day,” you said annoyedly, “Of course I’m nervous. I haven’t seen Maddalyn in three days. There’s going to be hundreds watching. I’m allowed to have my shivers before I’m at the stand.”

“You got it out of your system before you had to break apart, didn’t you?” Hans teased.

“That is none of your business.” You had. By thoroughly acquainting your manhood with the taut, soft space between the two lovely halves of Maddalyn’s beautiful perfect pearl. You thought it would be enough afterwards, but time told you that you were wrong.

Finally, you were let in. Mingling would only take place for a short time before the ceremony- half an hour for everybody to introduce themselves to whomever they wished, and anything else was for afterwards. It did mean you didn’t have to linger, if you didn’t want to- the party would go on for the rest of the day regardless of how quickly you absconded with Maddalyn, though returning afterwards was frowned upon, given that the act of consummation was assumed to have occurred. It was unseemly for a virgin bride to come back to the place of their union still bloody, amongst other unseemly descriptors best saved for the wedding bed.

“All the ghosts of our past’ve come back,” Hans marveled at the varied cast you had invited, keeping respectful distance for you to approach them- as they’d been instructed. Swarming the bride or groom was impolite at best. “You’re gonna have to cart the ginger princess’s cute ass around a while to talk to all of ‘em, eh?” Indeed. The bride’s feet were not allowed to touch the ground after leaving the altar, so if you wanted to socialize, it would be with her hanging off of you. “Though how long’ve you waited already, eh? Major Virgin Veal Pounder?”

“Vaeal Paendar,” Jorgen chuckled with a wide grin, and you feared he would break into a chant.

>Not to be impolite to the assembled guests, but you weren’t going to make Maddalyn wait for them once a gold band was on her finger. You’d be going to your appointed room. Immediately.
>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.
>Other?
Also-
>Seek out anybody and talk to them before the ceremony begins? What to talk about?
Needless to say, you’ve only got a limited amount of time before, though plenty afterwards. So long as you’re fine with your new wife being a part of every conversation.
>>
>>5356229
>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.

>Seek out anybody and talk to them before the ceremony begins?
I wonder if Signy made it. Would be nice to talk to her before, since it wouldn't be wise to bring Maddy in front of her. Perhaps other females I'm forgetting about. I don't think anyone else we would be a problem to have Maddy with us, right?
>>
>>5356229
>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.
Sit her on our shoulder instead of doing a princess carry. This puts the load off the arms, and additionally lets us covertly nuzzle her behind.
>>
>>5356229
>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.
>Seek out anybody and talk to them before the ceremony begins? What to talk about?
Find our parents, be doted upon, ask if they've had the chance to speak to any of our guests, see if they have any advice for fighting the ceremonial jitters.
I'd have like to check how our invited cripples were doing, if and how many managed to make it, but I suppose if there's plenty of time after the ceremony we can look for them then.
>>
>>5356229
>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.
I Hope Richter's been working out at least a little.
Super light or not, princess carrying a girl all night is gonna be exhausting.

>Seek out anybody and talk to them before the ceremony begins?
Find Richter's parents
Find Maddalyn's family
Talk to each, about love and marriage and familial pride and anything else they'd want to get off their chests before two become one, advice or otherwise.
Make sure to give dear Eda a big huge hug. Richter's mother deserves it.
>>
>>5356229
>>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.
It just makes tactical sense.
>>
>>5356229
>Maddalyn was a light-weighted wife. You could carry her around for as long as needed.

>Seek out anybody and talk to them before the ceremony begins? What to talk about?

Our parents of course. Thank you for raising us, sorry for worrying you all over the years (especially the last one or two, love you lots.
>>
>>5356265
>>5356464
Maddalyn's virginity is having a stay of execution.
Make sure to move her to your shoulder. Probably not wise to sniff her butt here though.

>>5356250
Get to the Signort before the other eyepatch wearer has to be in the same space as her.

>>5356319
>>5356338
>>5356597
Get some family engagement going.

>>5356319
Find the "invited cripples." I'm assuming that's your Silver Lance platoon members.

Writing- though priority goes to the one that your very soon to be wife instead of fiancée doesn't like being around. The other one that she doesn't like you being around.
>>
>>5356790
I assume there'll be a list later for who were actually able to come?
>>
Delaying again tonight, sorry, I just barely don't have enough time to finish the update after oversleeping.

>>5356996
>I assume there'll be a list later for who were actually able to come?
I'll be real with you man, there's no way in hell that I can draw up a full guest list. Which is why I ask for who specifically rather than having a roster of names. It's much, much, much easier to say who isn't there amongst those you want around, on an individual basis.
>>
>>5357372
Fair, was mainly wondering about the non-Strossvalders and Sosaldtians like Magnus and Wlad.
>>
“She’s a light weighted wife,” you said to Hans, “I can carry her around easily. As long as I need to, to speak with everybody I’d like.”

“Naederwohn.”

“What, Mal,” Hans admonished your driver, “Who doesn’t the little cupcake want to hang around with? We’re all friends here.”

“Er,” you coughed, “No, he’s right. She wouldn’t want to be around a few people…I suppose I’ll find them now.”

For example- the one woman besides Anya that made Maddalyn feel unreasonably threatened. She was in attendance, amongst the foreigners who had come. King Wladysaw had sent ahead that he would be unable to attend- he was simply too occupied with the politics of the reborn Ellowie to afford to leave the country, though he had waited some time until he felt he had no chance to take any holiday however brief. You’d heard of some of such politics- with the war in Netilland nearing its end after the climactic battle for the Capital, the Ellowian Republican Army was breaking off in parts to finally head for home, along with the Republican government in exile. They were vocally displeased to have to share the country with a king they considered completely illegitimate- but Wladysaw had consolidated power cleverly, having allies with the Netillian Republicans as well as forces of his own, though not near as numerous or equipped as the exiled Army. It was just enough for negotiations- and wide speculation that the end result would be a merging of governments into a Constitutional Monarchy, the powers of the crown but a check upon the representative government.

Quite frankly, that was probably better than before, in your admittedly biased opinion.

The other more traditional man you had invited, that Anya was absolutely certain would be around...wasn't. Yet, at least. Though your retinue was lurching about making absolutely sure of that before coming to any conclusions.

Though it was time to find the leader of what was supposed to be a representative republic, though all experience that you’d had with it was an army with a nation attached to it.
>>
It was simple to find the Mittelsosalian party- not because of the newly minted dress uniforms, which were only recognizable because they couldn’t belong to any other men, not because you saw the young leader herself, but because of Lord Wossehn. The wealthy wastelander had always wanted to attend a noble function, he had claimed, and he had not held back on his appearance when he had gotten the chance to. The man was clad head to toe in gold and platinum, his very suit jacket’s cloth as well as that of his trousers was gold, and glittered with gems. He was so brilliant that he was difficult to look at- when the sun struck him, he became its twin. Your curiosity to what the devil all that brilliance was, was what initially drew you over. Though, who you wanted to find was not too far, accompanied by a few huge heavyweights in the midst of a garden of stonework- one of the heavies whom you recognized, though his garb was far fancier than before. Not saying much, considering what the former auxiliary’s dress had been. The guards all recognized you, and gave you and their ruler a healthy distance in a protective circle.

Signy Vang, Cyclops, the Minister of the People, and who could say what other titles accumulated by now. She wore a white dress with red and blue accents, a star and golden trim at the top of her chest where the dress ended and was continued by black, luminescent sheer, a crimson and gold ribbon on her throat. He hair was tied behind her head save for two long tufts at the side of her head- she was more ladylike in dress than you’d ever seen her before, but she didn’t seem uncomfortable. When you first knew her, she was deep in sadness, but she still had a shine in her eye and a hopeful spirit, an irrepressible desire to snatch a gleam of hope from the gloom. That shine was gone, or at least diminished, a cigarette’s final moments smoldering in her lips as she rested a hand on the edge of a stonework block. A willing fool to idealism now seemed to calculate as you approached. At least, you couldn’t quite shake such a feeling.

“It’s been some time,” she said, letting the cigarette drop and crushing it under a fancy heeled shoe, rather than a boot that was the normal otherwise, but had no less force for what that foot wielded. “Your army is doing well, Kommandant. You’ve left a legacy hard for people to measure up to, but they can’t help but try. I think you’d be proud, but you aren’t coming back any time soon, I bet. I knew you hadn’t been hurt worse since we last met, but it’s nice to see it with my own eyes.”

“I’m not that special in that way.” Plenty of other ways, yes. “Signy. It’s good that you made it.”
>>
She blinked at her own name being mentioned. “I’m happy for you,” she said, though she wore no smile, “It’s funny. It hasn’t been very long, thinking about it, but our lives changed completely, while you’ve been waiting to do what you came over here in the first place to do, haven’t you?”

“It’s finally happening at least.”

“I can’t help but be envious,” Signy said as she picked a cigarette from her handbag resting on the stonework, and a lighter, staring contemplatively at the glow it made as she lit her smoke, and breathed it in slowly. “It’s not that long ago that all I thought I’d want was this, and not much more. I had such a small world to think about, but now it feels as far away as the northern sea’s edge.”

“Does it?” You asked, rhetorically.

Signy stared a half lidded gaze. “That’s not so easy a question as it used to be. Once I could be that self-indulgent, and, well, I was.” She paused, “Maybe I still am, a little. I’m rambling to you about myself on your wedding day. Sorry. You’ve come so far, you know.”

“I suppose I deserve this, don’t I,” you gave the bustling gathering a wide look.

“You deserve more, I think,,” Signy said, “Though that’s not my business.”

“Hard to think of it getting more than this,” you said, “What would it even be, the Kaiser’s coronation?”

Signy pursed her lips like you hadn’t gotten it, but let it be. “There’s to be victory parades once the last of the fighting is over back in the Republic. I’d ask for you to come, but you’ve already got plans, don’t you?” She gestured to the new rank insignia at your throat, “I was told you have a new position.”

A nod. “Von Blum is putting me in command of a new demi-battalion. Before I take to that, though, I’m going on a honeymoon holiday with Maddalyn. We’ll stop over in the Reich before going to Paelli.”

“Paelli?” Signy echoed, “Why there?”

“Paelli is the other side of the world. I’ve been all over the east. May as well see the west. It’s on the very edge, as well, where the Maelstrom touches the land. It’s a place for an adventure without war. Something I’d like to have with Maddalyn.”

“She doesn’t seem the adventurous type,” Signy said with a smoky sigh.

“Maddalyn might not think so either,” you said, “But I’ve spent more time away from her than with her. I want to even that out. Try to do something good for her. That, and Paelli has plenty of warm beaches.”
>>
Signy snorted at that. “Western bathing fashion is better for those, certainly. I’ve never been back to Naukland, where I was born, but the seas there are cold. Nobody would wear what people wear down south, unless they’re as hot blooded as Emreans are. And Vynmark prefers to dress like their seas are cold.” She sighed again, “Maybe I’ll have the chance for that again.”

“Wearing swimsuits?”

Signy smiled slightly. “Ha. No, I’ve done that recently. For something silly, nowhere near any sea sides. I meant marriage, the adventure of romance. What I wanted since I was little, with my idea of how my life would be…I wonder what my mother thinks of me, let alone my past self. Sometimes I can’t help but think if the person I used to be would be disgusted with what I became.”

“You still have the chance for that adventure,” you glanced to the man you had recognized. Had he taken your recommendation?

Signy saw where you were looking. “Maybe. I’ve been approached, but now’s simply not the time. I’ve been told a part of my appeal to many men is the loneliness that I have to live with. Though not my particular standards…the first general elections will be coming after the recent special military operation ends, to bring western Sosaldt under the protection of the Republic. I doubt that my position as Minister of the People will change. Most of the newer, more spiteful territories are still being organized. In my quest to bring the light of Republicanism, Democracy, Liberty, it’s strange how I must infringe that of others, isn’t it? Even if it’s for the best, later on.” She pointed with her cigarette towards a flock of petty nobles, “I haven’t lost my reputation before, or after. I don’t think many people like somebody like me being here, Richter. I’m sore reminder.” A smug addition, that. “Though I didn’t expect criticism from the Republicans here, when I arrived.” She crossed one arm over the other and rested her hip on the stonework, “I’d like them to like me as they used to, but they’ve wrapped themselves in thoughts all this time. I’ve burdened myself with deeds.” She paused. “Sorry. You’re still the only one I feel I can talk to about this. Somebody who knows the before and the now. I’m sure you know plenty of people like that, for you.”
>>
You shrugged. “It’s easier for me. I went back to Strossvald, where few respected what I did over there. Then I went to Ellowie, where things were the same. People heard I was the Kommandant, but that didn’t usually count for much.”

“Not so anymore. Now you’re the Silver Lance. Husband to a daughter of the powerful Von Blum family. Who can say what else.” She glanced to the medals on your breast. “Though…I hate to ask something like this of you, on a day like this. Where we should be celebrating the current peace, but…the future is looking murky in the east, Richter. I want to know…the Republic, this beautiful country that couldn’t have been real were it not for you and your sacrifices…if it were to come under threat, and the Archduchy loosed you from itself, would you come with your people and fight for it? I cannot think of any now who would not be inspired by that. Even those who called you enemy once.”

>Three times to Sosaldt was too much. You would not be Kommandant again. Could not. It was time for other legends to grow, because yours took you elsewhere.
>If you have the choice, you would. With more men and more power in your hands, you could even bring something to the table besides a strange tank and a burnt-face half hand.
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.
>Other?
Also-
>Speak about anything else?

Signort in her fancy social dress is coming next update, putting this out now so you don't have to wait even more.
>>
>>5357797
>Three times to Sosaldt was too much. You would not be Kommandant again. Could not. It was time for other legends to grow, because yours took you elsewhere.

Ask about Vynmark, how is their government reacting to the imminent Twaryian invasion? Going to do their own Alpha Two?
>>
>>5357797
>If you have the choice, you would. With more men and more power in your hands, you could even bring something to the table besides a strange tank and a burnt-face half hand.
Richter's soft spot for the fledgling Republic, while a form of governance he doesn't believe in, is well documented.
But
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.
Richter has priorities and duties to nation and family to consider as well.
>>
>>5357797
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.
But if shit really hits the fan the fighting will be done everywhere.
>>
>>5357801
The way I see it, Richter has enough personal ties, along with metaphorical and literal investments there, to want to help as much as he could. Just not enough to drop other important shit to play Kommandant.
If he was allowed to go anywhere to help out, I'd assume he'd go there first and foremost.
>>
>>5357801
+1, I'm sure he would like to, but I'm not sure he could. Maybe if things go really fubar in the archduchy that even the von blum's state collapses, but then it might be rather difficult to even get to Mittelsosalia.
>>
>>5357797
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.
>>
>>5357797
>If you have the choice, you would. With more men and more power in your hands, you could even bring something to the table besides a strange tank and a burnt-face half hand.
Strossvald sure does seem to have some problems looming, but as long as the shadow of the Reich is staying behind the mountains I would support going off to fight with the Republic. We do also have that meeting with Kaiser after all, and more or less I want to see if he is the kind of person that is going to conquer the whole continent again.
>>
>>5357797
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.
>>
>>5357797
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.

Between the IO, the Lances, the Von Blums, the Archduchy I think our loyalties are getting stretched very thin. which is very bad should any of these start fighting each other hint hint...

If we wanted that freedom, we would have stayed a Kommandant, or become a Warlord.
>Speak about anything else?
Good luck Signy, have a nice life somewhere far from here.

>Other?
Give a quick wink to the Wolfman and tell Signy that there was no one we trust more to her safety than him.
>>
>>5357797
>If you have the choice, you would. With more men and more power in your hands, you could even bring something to the table besides a strange tank and a burnt-face half hand.
Anya gets 2 pictures and Signy doesn't even get 1, this shit is rigged.
>>
>>5358122
>Good luck Signy, have a nice life somewhere far from here.
Damn, harsh.
If you feel that strongly, why not just go for the hard no?
>>
>>5357797
>>If you have the choice, you would. With more men and more power in your hands, you could even bring something to the table besides a strange tank and a burnt-face half hand.
>>
>>5357797
>Being pessimistic, you probably wouldn’t have that choice. In a world so fraught with looming uncertainty, you had to remain where your new family as well as your nation could find you waiting to defend them.
>>
>>5357797
>If you have the choice, you would. With more men and more power in your hands, you could even bring something to the table besides a strange tank and a burnt-face half hand.
>Speak about anything else?
Any further word of the enigmatic Loch to share to with us?
She brought an impressive uniformed entourage, but is that all? How is the Republic handling it's more clandestine operations with Loch seemingly out of frame now OOC I'm assuming Signy was eventually made aware of our own dirty little assassination job and presumably others that went on in the background during the formation? Has she begun she putting together her own private intelligence service in his stead? This is definitely something we should keep tabs on early, if we were to return to the wastes Kommandant a third time, assumedly higher up the Strossvald spook ladder than ever by then.
Would anons consider telling Signy about the Kaiser's seal we cryptically recieved wise? She didn't react when we told her of our stop over in the Reich specifically on the way to Paelli, so I guess she's unaware of the audience we're expecting when we arrive.
>>
>>5357799
Nah. Twice in the red dust was enough.

>>5357801
>>5357814
>>5358029
>>5358130
>>5358160
>>5358189
If you can, you will. What was fighting there before for if you would not return for what was fought for?

>>5357803
>>5357967
>>5358031
>>5358122
>>5358171
In the world you live in, you wouldn't have the luxury of that choice. You can only spread yourself so far, and ultimately, you have one allegiance.

>>5357799
How is that southern neighbor doing, considering their position on a potential list?

>>5358122
Try to wrap a bow on this.

>>5358189
What of Loch, and what of those unseen but most certainly felt?
You seem unsurprised about dropping by the Reich, as well...

Writing.
>>
>>5358252
Damn, minutes to lste to tie the vote.
>>
>>5358252
How's the drawing going?
>>
>>5359698
It's been done, I just haven't given myself time to actually sit down and write until now. It'll be out tonight.
Also since my work hours are getting changed soon hopefully that'll be more updates for this thread at least.
Which is good because this is supposed to be, you know, an epilogue for this part. Better start deciding what you want to name the little shits on the way.
>>
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“If I have the choice, I will.” A simple and easy declaration to make. Separated from logic, you had no reason to refuse to protect your investment, your comrades more than once, that once so small Republic that had grown into so much, because of a legend that you could only reluctantly admit, under its growth and exaggeration, was your own. A heroic epoch demanded you return in its hour of need…yet reality was not so poetic, was it? You still tried to justify it. “With more men, more power, I’ll actually be able to help more.”

Signy smiled at you- it was a nice, bright one, but you saw in her eyes that she knew your hesitancy. “That’s what you’d like to say, and I appreciate it. But..?”

“I probably won’t have that choice, I suppose,” you admitted, “I have more to fight for, more to protect. But I have my pride. I don’t want to choose. I want to fight for all of it.”

“I won’t ask that you fight for anything over your friends, your family, your Strossvald,” Signy said, “It’s not so simple for you to decide against those, as it is for me, now. Even if I understand…the greed.” Her tone turned melancholy. “I’d rather the future not require those kinds of questions, especially today. I want you to be happy, Richter. I always have.” She paused. “Maybe something less…heavy is better right now. Something on your mind rather than mine.”

There was admittedly more to ask. “You have an impressive entourage,” you looked to the Republican Guards, “They aren’t all there is, right? Somebody as important as you might need more subtle protection.”

“Mm.” Signy nodded, “That’s been set up. By….Loch’s people, before he and they all went. They aren’t numerous. But they’re well meaning. Xenakis would rather they not grow powerful, though. Says that their work and desire for it makes them untrustworthy over brute strength. So I defend myself with both.”

“Only defensive?” You weren’t about to spew it, but Strossvald’s Intelligence Office had expanded its offensive capabilities as of late. Perhaps that was a necessity.

Signy shook her head. “No. As I said…there are trust issues in the long term. I can’t simply do whatever I want when it comes to defying my closest advisors. I have to at least be the binding between these brilliant men.”

Maybe it was better, though perhaps not the wisest course of action. You could hardly say. The Intelligence Office had certainly done its part in exploiting you and causing you grief. Fewer organizations like them were not so terrible a curse. “Speaking of Loch,” you said, “Have you seen him? What’s he been up to?”
>>
Signy glared a dirty look somewhere to the side. “I don’t know, and he can stay gone,” she said bitterly, “Always there when needed. Never close as wanted. He’s toyed with me enough and I won’t have it anymore. Next he shows his face, he’ll be locked away.” She looked back to you and frowned. “I’m not just some scorned woman. He’s up to something and he won’t say what. Even things I think I’m right about he’ll evade. I can’t have somebody like that close to me. Not with who I am now.”

Perhaps it was alright to probe a bit more. “You didn’t seem curious of why I was stopping in the Reich…”

“I know why you are,” Signy said flatly, “He told me why.”

Oh.

Signy went on. “He doesn’t want to trap or deceive. He was forthcoming enough about that. I think he just believes the Kaiser wants to take his measure of you. How it compares to the legend, of the man and the bloodline. His man extended that invitation long before- and Loch insisted on it after, with the same token. There’s no reason to be wary…but I don’t know what they expect, either.”

“I’m interested in him myself,” you said, wondering. You’d had the luxury of time to investigate that some. Including his physical appearance…which, as you expected on some level, was the same as Loch’s. Only his hair was long, past his shoulders, and his face had a sternness the other seemed to lack. “They aren’t the same person, are they?”

You hadn’t mentioned who you referred to when you wondered aloud, but Signy shook her head regardless.

If the man wanted to talk to you, and Loch wanted you to do so as well, then you’d find out more soon anyways. “Close to the Republic,” you swerved, “There’s something brewing between Twaryi and Vynmark.” Rumors had spread all the way here- in Strossvald, a conflict between Twaryi and Vynmark was not particularly exciting news in and of itself, but speculation was wild on how involved the distant continent of Caelus was. “What’s next is inevitable, isn’t it? Shouldn’t they strike preemptively, as we did?”

“They won’t,” Signy said, “They have defenses they’ve been shoring up, making a show of doing so. I don’t know why the Twaryians are taking so long. I thought they’d have launched their attack by now, but they’re hesitating, building more strength. Drawing more troops from over the ocean. Mittelsosalia won’t be able to help them. We have to spend at least some time pulling ourselves together. The Southern Cities…the Zuide Confederacy, they call themselves now.”
>>
They had finally organized themselves into a nation, despite being a force in and of themselves for some time. Less changed than one might think, for the declaration of a new state. “They’ll probably help, but they can’t pull their strings all the way over the sea. Vynmark is an important shield and a vital market. I don’t think either they or Vynmark are ready for what’s coming. They’re anxious. They’ve set aside their pettiness for a moment, so that we can trade and make arrangements. I don’t know how long it’ll take, but Xenakis doesn’t think that Vynmark will win either way. He says they lack fighting spirit as a nation. They’re certainly not Nauk any longer.”

It wouldn’t be an unfair assessment. Vynmark had avoided proper all-out war for decades, unlike practically the rest of Sosaldt, being limited to small skirmishes and high seas policing. Most anybody else on Vinstraga would consider them soft people, all the cold edge of Nauk that the northern Nauklanders (the race that this young woman in front of you belonged to) melted away by the warm climes of the southern shore.

“I hope I’m not going there, then,” you said.

“Me either.”

A pause, as Signy had let the cigarette burn down to her gloves.

“I don’t know where I’m going next,” you said, “I’d like somewhat of a break before the next crazy thing happens.”

“You’d deserve it,” Signy said as she let the butt fall from her fingers. “Hm. I shouldn’t keep you longer. It’s not much time until the ceremony. It was nice seeing you, Richter. Hopefully we’ll see each other again.”

“Mm,” you waved, “Bye, then.”

As you passed out the ring of bodyguards once more, you strayed close to the biggest one of them all- his wolf pelt was gone, but his name wouldn’t have changed. “You survived then, Wolfgang?”

A snort. “’Course, Kommandant. I didn’t get where I was being a pussy.”

“Good,” you said, “I trust you to take care of her. I don’t know if you owe me any favors, but do me that one, if you can."

“You got nothin’ to worry about.”
>>
You believed the swarthy former brigand well enough, though to be honest, you wondered how much Signy needed to be taken care of in the first place. She was still a round-faced, freckled north-blooded woman of only twenty years, but she might have been the most powerful person at this gathering, given time.

She had been right, though. You didn’t have much more time before you were to go wait at the altar, alongside a sort of functionary you hadn’t seen in a while- a priest. Alexander may have gutted the influence of the Cathedra and churches in general when he swept over Vinstraga, but they still existed where the people refused to have them replaced, and where they were no threat to powers that came after. Spiritual guidance, charity, unions made in the eyes of heaven. The place where they were allowed to fulfill a small part of where the Cathedra once claimed to be representation of divine justice. This priest was no Cathedra man, but of the Sect of Valiance. By your mother’s request, he had journeyed some way- as the Sect of Valiance was not one of the subsets of Holy Judgment common to the Blumlands, but the local differences were inoffensive anyways.

You certainly didn’t feel like finding excuses to get into theological debate. It just meant a few might cock an eyebrow at how the preeminent witnesses would be the ghosts of comrades and those who were ancestors in spirit.

In the minutes before you’d have to hurry along, you managed to find your parents- after greeting your mother with a tight embrace, you took them to find their counterpart. Easy to find as before, but much easier to have a lone audience with, Lord Baranabas Von Blum. Both of his fairer halves were now passed on, but his eldest son was present at his side.

“Sir Von Tracht,” Bastian bowed to your father as he approached with you, “It is my joy to see you and your family healthy and hale.” You thought he might be referring to you for a moment, but no- the bearer of a title belonged to the patriarch (or matriarch, if it so happened). Anybody referring to “Lord Von Blum” would be speaking of the father here, as well. “Words as ever cannot express my gratefulness to you.”

“Don’t be so formal, Bastain,” Geroldt said, relaxed completely, “I’d think your family debts of any sort are being settled today, no?”

Barnabas Von Blum leaned on a cane tipped with a golden bulb emblazoned with his family sign, though you had seen him spry enough to not need it as any more than a symbol of status. “We pass from debt to brotherhood. Lady Von Tracht, I should hope that nobody has seen to give offense to you?”
>>
Eda Von Tracht-Blutenstein was given no favors by the latter part of her surname. A disgraced, treasonous house. She shook her head. “Your guests have been respectful, as expected.”

“As expected. Yet upstarts have a way of defying even simple expectations,” Von Blum huffed gruffly. “They will not be suffered to give offense on this day to your son.”

“What about to your daughter?” you asked.

“Richter,” your mother scolded you warningly, but Lord Von Blum let it pass.

“She is to be joined to your house,” the old patriarch said, “She will be afforded your honor, at a minimum.”

“Speaking of that,” your father said, “Richter, you have decided your oath, yes?”

“I have.” An important element of marital ceremony, especially to the high houses’ appearances. If a daughter was given over to a lower noble, it was not seen as casting off the blood for some mutt to feed on like dinner scraps, and the Oath to the Father was part of such. It was something to swear to Lord Von Blum, upon him giving over Maddalyn to take up the name Von Tracht.
There were a few different sorts- rather simple, and well-reviewed by any priesthood that had enough brothers to call itself a sect. It was seen as radical to make your own oath from scratch- though tolerable so long as it was approved of by a holy man. They did not necessarily have to be backed up to the letter by action, but some respect towards the words in the future was expected by anybody who heard them.

>An Oath to Steel, that your force of arms, your blade, would be carried in honor of your Father-in-Law. Your glory would be his house’s, and your banner his and yours.
>The Oath to Hearth, that your progeny would be as his, after yourself. Your home was made in his lands, as your family was made in his daughter’s blood.
>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
>Other?
>>
>>5360062
Well Hearth is out given Richter's entire motivation, even if our kids being born Von Blums isn't exactly a terrible thing.

Steel for much of the same reasons; though do the Von Trachts still owe that to the Archduke's line?

>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
>>
>>5360068
To specify, the Oath to Hearth isn't a case where they're legally Von Blum, but more an affirmation of allegiance to the house and its lands. Staying true to it wouldn't involve not having your kids be Von Tracht, but more along the lines of, not jumping over to another high house and favoring them over the stated home.
It's not as much a strict legal obligation as it may have been in older times when the territories that make up Strossvald were much more fractious, but as said, it's expected to at least be given consideration and lip service.
Third time's the charm.
>>
>>5360056
Signy be looking fresh!
>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
>>
>>5360076
Ah I see. How would Steel work with all the strings the IO has over Richter?

Whatever we swear, yet another thing to bond with Magnus if he managed to make it, I'm sure he totally ate up all of this when he was younger judging by his childhood friend.
>>
>>5360089
>How would Steel work with all the strings the IO has over Richter?
There's overlap between Steel and Light in martial terms, but they have different sectors. The Oath to Steel isn't necessarily one of military allegiance or defense, but of honor and glory. A declaration where even if you aren't marching with a lord's host, you still carry his blade.
Which also means that if you fuck up you dishonor your lord, of course. It being an oath to prestige and glory rather than to the people and the land.
>>
>>5360062
>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
>>
>>5360062
>An Oath to Steel, that your force of arms, your blade, would be carried in honor of your Father-in-Law. Your glory would be his house’s, and your banner his and yours.
>>
>>5360062
>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
>>
>>5360062
>An Oath to Steel, that your force of arms, your blade, would be carried in honor of your Father-in-Law. Your glory would be his house’s, and your banner his and yours.
Both Steel and Light are ones I like, but I am just a little wary of Lord Von Blum. The oath of light is something that already aligns with our interests but I don't like something that long reaching for someone who's family is just a little shady.
>>
>>5360062
>An Oath to Steel, that your force of arms, your blade, would be carried in honor of your Father-in-Law. Your glory would be his house’s, and your banner his and yours.

I don't want future Von Trachts beholden to them, given that the Kerfuffle is on the horizon. Besides, I'd see Richter pledging to be honorable in this scenario.

Also way out of left field, but the goddamn Kaisers are all wizard clones. Wizards goddamn everywhere. Even Richter has wizards being made out of him!

And speaking of magic bullshit, does anyone think that if we go full demiphantom possession hunting we can stop the Archduchy civil war? Would it be worth pursuing?
>>
>>5360267
No, I don't want Richter to be possessed again, not worth it.
>>
>>5360062
>>An Oath to Steel, that your force of arms, your blade, would be carried in honor of your Father-in-Law. Your glory would be his house’s, and your banner his and yours.
>>
>>5360272
Presumably we would refine the process somewhat before trying again.
>>
>>5360283
How exactly do you "refine the process" of submitting to the Demiphantom's wishes and allowing another spirit to intermingle with yours?
>>
>>5360062
>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
Von Blum lances when?
>>
>>5360288
Maybe we can create a partition of ourself like on a computer so we can run two spirits on the same system? Look man this is what we pay soulbinders for if we stick them in the research dungeon long enough I'm sure they'll figure all this stuff out.
>>
>>5360068
>>5360087
>>5360124
>>5360139
>>5360294
The Oath of Light, the torch blazing in the night to come.

>>5360131
>>5360172
>>5360267
>>5360279
The Oath of Steel, the raised blade, the standard borne.

Writing.
>>
>>5360056
D*gZAMN

Images like this assure me that Anyafags are, indeed, fags.

>>5360062
>Swear the Oath to Light, that no matter how far you went or the length of time, you would aid his house in its times of struggle. You and your progeny would be there in the darkest hours.
This seems the most in-line as a Von Tracht, and lets our kids keep our surname. Barnabas has what? Three sons to pass on his name already, plus Mathilda has four(?) older sisters ahead of her. Just makes sense.

>>5360381
I know I'm late but my vote won so fuck you.
>>
Though your oath was not to be said until the moment it was supposed to be uttered, you’d decided by now, of course. Though it hadn’t been an easy, obvious choice. Your favored two were the Oath of Steel, a promise for glory, to not bring the shame of defeat or cowardice upon the house, and the Oath of Light, to return from wherever, whenever, to defend the home and blood in their most dire hour. Ultimately, you chose the latter. Perhaps it was the romance of it. Perhaps it was a recognition of what appeared more and more inevitable.
“I would presume Steel,” Barnabas Von Blum said, a guess that he did not wish indulged, “Your son has an adventurous character about him, to say the least.”

“One we would rather he relax from,” your mother said, slightly discomforted, as she hugged you.

Well, it wouldn’t be a poor betrayal of expectations.

“I will not disappoint you, mother, father, Lord Von Blum.” You bowed your head, “Whatever your expectations may be.

Mother and father did not need to say what they expected. They had ever told you they wished for you to live happily- your goals for yourself had ever been more lofty than their plans had been. How you wished that grandfather and grandmother, and your uncle, might have seen you now as well. Yet Von Blum closed his tired eyes, and you wondered what he was thinking to say.

“Once, Maddalyn Annelie Erdelia was my most beloved daughter,” he said, suddenly distant, “I should hope she has learned from her mistakes, so that you know at least some of my adoration. I do not give her unto you without care. She has not redeemed herself by far. But I can trust you to not act with spite or hatred. In time, I will be glad for your happiness.”
A strange comment, and you and your fiancée had not been without tensions in the past, but you nodded, bowed.

Any further time was interrupted by summons, ahead of those of others. A pair of bridesmaids- representatives of both families, for what could be represented by yours.

The girl who looked identical to your bride today could be distinguished not by the false mole she usually wore, but by the exact style of her dress- and that she only wore a half veil that cascaded down one side of her face and not the other. For Mathilda’s purpose on this day as bridesmaid was to lure away evil spirits, traditionally, and her eerily exact appearance made her the best suited, on top of being a sister. She said nothing to you- only slipped her glove down to the elbow, and gave you just enough sight of discolored, twisted flesh to set you at ease. Did she know? She had been away most of the time between then and now.
>>
In a strange twist of fate, the other woman was similarly mutilated, but in a far wider spread manner. However, a heroic effort to hide the numerous scars and burns and discoloration had been made. Hilda was a far, far different shape and size of body to Mathilda, but she wore the same half-veil and silvery-blue dress. She was still a homely woman- but the experts had afforded her a country beauty like a rough gem cut and polished, you had never been able to see through to before. Hilda couldn’t have a place in the ceremony without this- it was barely tolerable that a lowborn woman would have such a position as a principle bridesmaid in the first place, if her numerous uglier traits were allowed to show through, the high nobility would faint of shock. As things stood now, Hilda was merely the small controversy of an honored commoner, favored for deeds and loyalty, though her belly was beginning to push out more now, a separate controversy that would remain unspoken of.

“Oh, you look gorgeous, dear!” Your mother said sweetly as she embraced Hilda, making sure not to touch any of the thick painting needed to hide her scarring all over her body.

Your father had to squint at Mathilda still. “You truly do look exactly like your sister.”

“I do, Sir Von Tracht,” Mathilda bent at the shoulders and bowed ever so slightly, bobbing up and down at the knees. Her tone was stilted and formal- and no less disturbingly alike Maddalyn’s voice. “It is time.”

So it was. You bid a temporary farewell, and followed the two women to the altar where you would soon be standing, waiting, for this day’s most tense moment, trying not to sweat and stain your well pressed uniform any further.

-----

You joined the priest at the altar, a Brother of Valiance, named Adler, though such would not be his true name. He had a tired darkness around his eyes- priests were not numerous enough to fulfill even the reduced duties asked for them, and they were hardly encouraged to practice beyond that a man who guided faith often had the respect given to those who pursued what they believed was right despite not benefiting from it particularly. He wore a dress similar to a tabard worn by a knight of old, along with the hint of pauldrons and gorget embossed onto thicker parts of the clothes. Brothers of Valiance were expected to be veterans of battle, and you had no doubt that this greying-hair man had seen at least some.

The crowds filed in. Some amongst the rear rows were men you had invited- rowdier sorts, who had been cautioned against uproar but would do it for the sake of it anyways. You’d have much rather had them at the front of the ceremony, but custom forbid it. At least they were allowed to be there at all.

Silence, besides the soft droning of pipes as you looked down the garden’s aisle, off the platform you stood on, and were able to see Maddalyn for the first time in days.
>>
A translucent white veil hid her face and her hair, a bouquet of red, white, and blue flowers in her hands, smaller than normal, as to not make a mockery of her tiny size. Her father led her up, by her side, an arm in hers. You stared, tried not to shake, as you met Lord Von Blum in front of the podium he was not to step upon himself, for it was for you, Maddalyn, and the Judge’s witness.

“Lord Von Blum,” you said as rehearsed, “I vow to you, to bestow upon your house mine protection and stalwart heart, to drive forth the darkness of the night that dares set itself upon thy blood and lands. As your blood is bound to mine, I shall be your Light, and no despair will descend so long as I draw breath and stand.”

Barnabas Von Blum tilted his head up in what seemed a small amount of surprise, and lifted his cane, touching its head to your shoulder, then raising it. “Your solemn Oath to Light is heard before my blood, and the Judge Above. I set mine flesh and blood to step forth as she wishes, for she has my blessing to go to you.”

>Blessing of a King’s Majesty- Bane of Dark and Shadow

He set his cane down, and Maddalyn stepped forward, beside you, stealing only a small glance through her veil before she ascended beside you.

Most of the priest, Adler’s speech, blurred by you, as you peered to Maddalyn. She was so lovely. So soft, pristine. Admiration and affection mixed purity and filth together. You hungered for her so badly your guts gnawed, but when she smiled gently at you, through that shimmering cloud of cloth, you wished to kneel. That your father and comrades watched you kept your knees and shoulders straight.

Finally.

“The Judge Above grants his protection in the will of warriors,” Adler said in a rough edged tone, “To defend house and blood is thine sacred duty, Warrior Von Tracht. Maddalyn Von Blum has come to you of her duty and will, should you think to shirk thine duty, then turn and retreat, in dignity. Else, commit to your bride your declaration of eternal duty.”

He closed his book, and though nobody expected you to turn and leave, there was still a silence as you slipped a golden ring onto Maddalyn’s finger, lifted her veil, and bent down to kiss her on the lips.

That moment felt eternal- you forced back the temptation to push your tongue into her mouth and feel her hot, labored breath and make her chin wet with drool, to take her as fiercely as your heart demanded, for this was a respectful ceremony. That soft touch later, her arms clasped about your neck and yours around her waist, you separated, to polite applause from the front, and a din of hollering and hoots and wails from the back as a smattering of enlisted tankers and Silver Lances showed the high nobility exactly what they thought of all their manners.
>>
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“There were times when I thought this moment would never come,” Maddalyn spoke finally, her voice thin and glad, “I love you, Richter.”

Maddalyn took her bouquet, and flung it as hard as she could into the air, and where it finally tumbled to, you did not look. Your wife was protected by you now- she no longer need defend herself from evil with a veil and flowers.

>Who is lucky enough to catch it? Votes will be chances, and a dice rolled to decide whose hands it lands in.

“I love you too,” you said as you lifted Maddalyn up by her knees and her back, and carried her back down between the rows of guests. The party would begin again- and you had more people to speak with as music roused once more and the cheers and applause continued. She was now Maddalyn Von Tracht- in the eyes of man and God.

-----
>>
A series of slaps on the back greeted you as you reunited with your platoon from the Silver Lances- Van Halm, with a crutch keeping him standing, and his younger brother accompanying him, and both Von Rotenhofs, Stevan having mostly recovered. They gathered with their crews, as well as your substitute gunner and radio operator, a few Republic men like Planckner, as well as your other platoon…though Anya had decided to keep her distance.

“What a catch,” Hausen whistled in admiration with a scrape and a bow, “Lady Maddalyn Von Tracht-Blum, your new husband spoke much of you.”

“Knock it off,” Schafer said gruffly. “Major. I didn’t know you were an adherent of Valiance.”

“Well,” you turned your head to the side, “I’m not exactly the best practicioner…”

“Eh. Bullshit.” Schafer closed his eyes and crossed his arms.

“I heard this guy shot down a plane,” Stein said jealously, pointing, “Is that true?”

“Don’t play it up so damn much,” Schafer muttered.

“Vehrlors would’ve liked to come here,” Elder Von Rotehof approached you and saluted, bowed to Maddalyn in your arms, “He’d be happy you made it this far. Further than he got.”

“Ah, Maddalyn,” you noticed Maddalyn seeming lost, “These are my comrades. My friends. You know some of them, but I ought to introduce you to them…I wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for them.”

“Don’t think she needs to hear all the stories,” Schafer said lowly. “Not from us.”

“No,” Maddalyn shook her head, “I want to hear from you, all of you. It would be my honor.”

Schafer and Hausen looked skeptically to your other crewmen. Malachi spattered out a jumbled phrase, that Jorgen agreed with.

“Shae’s reallfeng,” he slurred- somebody had given him a cup a bit early. “Naeda baellshedder.”

“Yeah,” Hans, cut in, “The Princess gives respect where it’s due. Don’t hold yourself back. We certainly didn’t.”

“…Better get ready for your arms to get tired then, Major,” Schafer said with a sigh.

As you mingled, though, you noticed more significant observers- Pfortner, you recognized the pudgy, square shape of, but there was also the barely recognizable form of your battalion commander Jagdmeister- and beside him, by the markings on his black and blue uniform, trimmed with silver, could only be the General der Lanz, Goldfolger.

A true honor, though you couldn’t salute them with Maddalyn in your arms.

>Take care of anything else at the wedding, besides this mingling? (Who to speak with, about?)
>Have your part in the afterparty. A short part. Because you needed to take Maddalyn home.
>Other?
>>
>>5360903
Well besides this bunch:
Go greet the senior officers for a bit, not everyday you get to meet the General Der Lanz

Check if Magnus was able to make it.

Alina asked us to pass a letter to Stefan last thread iirc so settle that if it hasn't been.
>>
>>5360900
>spoilers
Damn spooky, but not unexpected.

>>5360901
>Who is lucky enough to catch it?
Hilda. Girl NEEDS this.
Anya’s on the romantic come up as we speak and Signy COULD get married at any time when she decides to stop idolin it up.

>>5360903
>Take care of anything else at the wedding, besides this mingling? (Find Magnus and chat it up with him, Lord Wossehn, to see if this party was everything he imagined. And we can hit a two for one with Goldfolger and Jagdmeister)

>>5360918
This too.
Hopefully we can do all this before Richter's arms get tired.
>>
>>5360903
Yay, it finally happened! Now it's officially no longer a harem quest

Supporting >>5360918
>>
>>5360903
Interesting blessing Lord Von Blum has there, wonder if it does anything against spooky stuff

Take care of anything else at the wedding, besides this mingling? (Who to speak with, about?)
Supporting
>>5360918
>>5360971
>>
>>5360903
>>5360971
support
>>
>>5360900
can't wait to see what the blessing/bane gives us

>>5360901
gotta throw in a chance for
>Anya
I think it would be neat. Also might come with a side effect of easing Maddy's insecurity if Anya is seen as having other romantic prospects. I'd really like for them to make up one day.

>>5360903
>Take care of anything else at the wedding, besides this mingling? (Who to speak with, about?)
Don't want to leave out Pfortner if we're talking to the brass, I like him.
I wonder if we can spot an inconspicuous Poltergeist in the crowd, though we probably wouldn't want to talk to him with Maddy
Maybe talk to the parents again, with the bride this time, maybe get some advice.
Might be a good idea to see if any of the nobles we met at our debut are around, and to greet them.

I can't believe it finally happened.
>>
My eyes aren't wet, yours are!
>>5360901
>Who is lucky enough to catch it?
Hilda if only because there's no way Maddy's dyel nerd arms could throw something far enough to reach Anya and the common soldiery in the back row heh
>>5360903
>Take care of anything else at the wedding, besides this mingling?
Previous suggestions are all good.
Are speeches usually performed after a Valiance Church wedding? Are we about to roast/get roasted?
>>
>>5360897
>and gave you just enough sight of discolored, twisted flesh to set you at ease. Did she know?
That's pretty concerning. This means either that Mathilda somehow found out about Maddalyn's stunt (how?) or, even more concerning, that Maddalyn impersonates her sister so frequently that Mathilda just correctly assumed that she must have already tried it on us by now. This had better not become a regular problem.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d5)

>>5360918
>>5360985
>>5360975
Go to the higher command staff.
Look for girly boots.

>>5360971
>>5360985
>>5361000
Go for that Golden Sun.

>>5361050
The company commander, and the household.

>>5361134
And previous.

>>5360971
>>5360985
>>5361000
Hilda
>>5361050
Anya
>>5361134
Hilda.

If this roll is a four then the winds of fate really have it out for hosing Hilda.

Writing.

>>5361134
>Are speeches usually performed after a Valiance Church wedding? Are we about to roast/get roasted?
Frankly, you'd be in your right to head straight out, since this ceremony is a mish-mash of different traditions that weren't made in mind for each other anyways. Messing about with the men is more intended for the separation days- or maybe the day after.
>>
You hadn’t met with Pfortner yet- so you went to greet your former commanding officer, though he had found himself new to the job, having replaced the former commander who had fallen in the Battle of Sundersschirm, Von Silbertau. He recognized your approach, and saluted when you stopped in front of him, a flinty gaze professional, but not expecting your hands to free themselves from transporting a lady of a high house, especially one you were just married to.

“Major Von Tracht,” he said.

“Major Pfortner,” you said back, “Or have you been promoted? If your position is permanent.”

He nodded stiffly. “I am a Lieutenant Colonel now. A necessary promotion, even if it isn’t particularly welcome.”

“I believe you deserve it, at least.”

A respectful nod again. Though. “Compliments won’t have me regret my decision.” Not that you’d have it that way. The platoon had gone off knowing that they wouldn’t get off free for your brashness. With five months to go of having slashed pay and another eleven before a suspended sentence was nullified, Pfortner’s lash was still felt, but you knew it was not spiteful. The opposite, even. So you respected him. “Now that you are a major, perhaps you’ll see how troublesome it can be when a captain or lieutenant decides to go off on an adventure.” His tone was stern, but that was just the nature of his voice. He waved it off like he was speaking a joke. “Though by the same token,” he pointed to your Silver Shield, “A small unit, a lone team, can have quite the impact if they have the sort of daring that tempts them, can’t it?”

“Maybe fate’s revenge on me will show itself in a less strenuous circumstance.” Maybe you could contain any fury as well as Pfortner had seemed to.

“I apologize for any inconvenience my husband caused you,” Maddalyn said in a haughty voice.

That brought the smallest smirk to Pfortner’s otherwise jowly, ever frowned face. “Keep it a secret from him,” he feigned whispering, as you could most clearly hear it, “But the Beast Hunter of Fourth Company was mostly well behaved. Though I apologize if his cut in pay causes any financial difficulty to your family.”

Maddalyn giggled slightly, and you shook your head.

“I suppose you’ve had your taste of freebooting for now, though,” Pfortner returned to a serious tone, “The Lances are never hesitant to welcome former members back, remember.”

“Yes, sir,” you said.
>>
“Fourth Company will remember, as well. I’ve done my best to prevent the attendant members from making this marriage memorable in a less pleasant way,” he squinted through his round glasses at some who must have been particularly disreputable. “And I should continue to do that, by the looks of things. I have a last message to pass along.” He pointed with a thumb, “Reserve Battalion’s commander and the Generalleutnant Goldfolger are present. They wished to see you in person.”

“Right away. Lieutenant Colonel…thank you.”

“At east, Major.” Pfortner tilted his head, “You’ve more important people to speak with.”

As you carried Maddalyn over, she said to you, “He isn’t the sort of man I’d expect from your Silver Lances.”

“Some people wouldn’t expect me.”

“Ridiculous.”

Your posture stiffened as you walked before your two former unit superiors, and you squared your feet off, and said in a clear and loud voice. “Oberst Jagdmeister, Generalleutnant Goldfolger. Major Richter Von Tracht, of the Blumlands Special Mechanized Force Demi-Battalion. You summoned me?”

Jagdmeister cackled harshly, though Goldfolger saluted. The higher officer, the General Der Lanz, had a tall, willowy frame, a sharp chin and a long nose, with narrow eyes and deep bags beneath them, that had an eternally condescending slant- an odd feeling that, despite how much he tried to look plain, he often looked confident in superiority. A look complemented by a silvered and blue cloak that fluttered in the wind.

“You forget to salute, boy?” Jagdmeister teased. You were caught off guard- you had seen Jagdmeister very seldomly before, and his sharp features and grey tufted hair gave him the fierce appearance of a hawk, though his grin had been stolen now from a jackal.

Some clever thought rolled through your head, and you heaved Maddalyn up to your shoulder with a huff of effort, sitting her up there with your arm supporting your side- leaving your arm free to salute properly.

Jagdmeister cocked an eyebrow. “An advantage to her small frame, eh?”

“Colonel,” Goldfolger coughed slightly, “As much as peacetime is for relaxation, take some care that this young man may not have learned the depth of that.”

“Eh, he was mine as much as I’m yours, General. He can take it.”

“Regardless.” Goldfolger bowed at the waist to Maddalyn, “Lady Von Blum.”

“Generalleutnant,” your wife answered. A simple payment of respect from even this prestigious officer.

“Major,” he regarded you next, “I’ve heard that you’ve received a fortuitous double promotion. Either your talent or luck has been recognized, clearly.”

“Yes, sir,” you said, “Though it is from my new father in law…”

“You are special, no doubt,” Goldfolger said, “Not many men would doubt you after that night of your defense against that armored assault, even if that song is not what most choose to sing about, hm?”
>>
A little shiver in your spine. That had been a night so bad, you had been forced to use the Hellfire Shell, against men. An act that had you on edge for weeks, and had repercussions you were fortunate enough to never fully discover, if the soulbinders prowling about searching were any indication. If anything, you were saved by how unassuming they must have assumed a tank in a warzone was.

Yet Goldfolger knew something. Suspected something, from the look in his eye, though he couldn’t have understood what.

“You’ve a very interesting career, Von Tracht,” he said, rubbing his pointed chin, “Incredibly intriguing. With that in mind, I won’t demand you come back right away. After all, Jagdmeister might be hurt that one of his whipping boys is of rank to talk back so soon. However, should you grow nostalgic to take up Helman’s lance once more…speak directly to me. You’ve proven your worth as a normal soldier.”

“I…would be honored, Generalleutnant,” you said, hesitant.

“Good.” A quick up and down of that sharp chin. “Do not strain yourself before then. I would rather you remain young when we work together again.”

“I’ll try not to be too long.”

“You and your close comrades both. You should know, having lost some. When you are with them, they say to you with what smile they can muster…”I’ll see you then.” Many years after, when all of them are gone and you are the only one left? You cannot help but ask the night, “When will I join you?” It is an unpleasantness of true old age. So, mind that.” He turned to Jagdmeister, “Especially when some of them don’t ever seem to quite jump out.”

Some exposure of his spirit, but your guard was not down.

“That was all, Von Tracht,” Goldfolger said with a salute. “We can save anything further for when we work together once more. Send ahead what sort of beer you prefer then.”

“Sir.” Though you’d have liked to have chatted a little more, it seemed he was already short on time, with how he spoke something to Jagdmeister, and they both immediately turned about to walk off.

As you were left, you searched, asked your crew and officers who knew him for any sign of Magnus or his mates. There were none- and no distinctive Netillian cavalry uniforms, either. You did see Anya searching about- and she looked discomforted. Agitated.

A shame- though you did remember to get Stefan to stay in the area a while. You’d need to have somebody else deliver it with how occupied you were, but Anya’s sister had wanted a letter presented to him. You half wondered what it might be- and half were willing to guess already.

Instead, you found an incredibly easy to locate gentleman. Lord Wossehn, in all his glittering, also escorted by Republic guardsmen but in constant defiance of their efforts to keep around and about his person.
>>
“If it isn’t the man of the hour, and the damsel of the day,” Lord Wossehn spread his arms out in an embrace of the air between you- and you saw that his very hair had been dyed white blonde (or perhaps it was a wig), causing him to glow even more than his clothes first impressed. “Richter Von Tracht, Maddalyn Von Tracht-Blum,” he bowed far too deeply and scraped too much to be seen as anything but obsequious to what small court manners you knew, but perhaps he felt he needed to compensate. Or he was physically incapable of overacting, like he was of unable to hold back being verbose, and…creative with language. “Sparkradiance and sunripples, your family keeps fine company, my lady.”

“Ah, I remember you,” Maddalyn said with a small gasp, “You’re the dandy that was such help.”

“Ho ho, a dandy? you flatter this gregariman, my lady,” another deep sweeping bow, “Did your man tell you of his newfound wealth?” Maddalyn nodded. “I’ve glad tidings for him and you, then. Your company has, as I foresawdictated, struck black, runny gold. Though of course, they’re afforded the chance to probe about by your efforts, hm?”

“That’s good news,” you agreed, though you wondered just how much time you truly had been a majority stockholder in this new company to be informed like this. They hadn’t even completed setting up mail correspondence with your household.

“Indeed, you’ll be able to return my loan in no time,” as ridiculous as he seemed, he never strayed from business.

“Is this what you expected?’ You asked Wossehn, whose first name you knew but which seemed unfitting without the mouthful of its other parts. “Is it as…splendorous as you would want it to be?”

“Why, no, my good man,” Wossehn said, as though proud, “It is not splendorous, but dignified, a quiet and regal beauty. A humbling surrounding to draw inspiration into the spirit. Ah.”

You presumed that the basic answer was, yes, he was a fan.

Maddalyn began to weigh on your shoulder, and you tapped her to slide down into your arms once more. Something Wossehn did not fail to notice.
“Ah, should you truly linger here? I will not be offended if our conversation is brief, dear Richter. This is far from our only chance at communications.”

“I’m fine,” you said, but Maddalyn put a hand on your chest. “…Though I suppose I shouldn’t tempt misfortune. I’ve done plenty of that these past years.”

“This is her day, remember,” Wossehn said with a wave, “Not the rest of ours. Never fear, I am plenty entertained, ho ho.”

“Don’t be in a hurry to leave,” you said with a wave yourself, what you could muster, “I’m finding plenty of free time, not being off on some adventure…”
>>
So you carried Maddalyn out, followed by a train of well-wishers, passing Hilda- who now bore the bride’s bouquet, though she gave it little regard, staying with your parents. Mother gave you one more hug, and a rub of your head, Maddalyn included in the former and being squashed between you. A courier car waited to pick you up- and a trailing car with armed guards, of course, to take you to where you both could have some privacy from the party. A house reserved for guests, now reserved for you- and it would be delightfully empty.

Which was good, because Maddalyn’s mouth was being assaulted and her wedding dress being pulled off her body before you even passed through the doors to the bedroom.

-----

Yet.

Though you kissed her passionately, and she returned it, though you were both in your underclothes, and you both on the bed, your loins tearing against your briefs to be let out and your hands rubbing between Maddalyn’s legs as you made out, you felt…a recalcitrance in her. She wasn’t acting aroused as she often did when you fooled around. She didn’t croon and sigh, whispering sweet things. She felt…tense. Balled up, and cold. She didn’t drool when you kissed.

A quick and eager hand slipped her panties from around her hips and pulled them down, away from her thighs and over her little feet, tossing them on the bed by her, and tried to work your best magic. A long, loving lick, and a deep kiss, but she seemed to resist, even as you went in, around, teased and played with her for long minutes.

“Is something wrong?” You asked, puzzled.
>>
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“N-no,” Maddalyn whispered, then swallowed, “…I’m just…j-just…I’m scared.”

“What are you afraid of, darling?” You stroked her cheek. A flash of concern broke through the steaming fog of desire in your mind.

“It’s…It’s nothing, truly,” Maddalyn said, looking crestfallen, “Just a silly feeling…just something I need to get used to. Just…just do it, Richter. We are husband and wife…” She put a hand to your crotch- felt the thing that was prepared for battle, had been pounded at the gates of your head to be released for this day, clawed and gnashed its teeth now that it knew the moment was so close, and its enthusiasm was terrible infectious. “We are in love, aren’t we? So we should make love…no matter what fear I have inside…”

You nodded, kissed her. Only, you were just wary that Maddalyn didn’t seem to feel the same, despite you doing plenty that melted her well enough in the past.

>She gave her permission. She asked you to. To deny her would be an insult. Let loose the amorous reckoning.
>Hold back. Keep yourself in check. This was new to both of you, and below the psyching up, maybe you had to be careful, frightened, too…
>No. Even if it was your wedding evening, you just couldn’t. Wouldn’t. If she didn’t feel up to it and couldn’t explain it, then that was that.
>Other?
>>
>>5361812
>Hold back. Keep yourself in check. This was new to both of you, and below the psyching up, maybe you had to be careful, frightened, too…

By all means do it, but gently.
>>
>>5361812
Oh man. I don't know how we're supposed to act in this situation, especially since it might be related to Maddy's sorcery, and not just anxiety.

>Ask if Maddalyn had an indecent fantasy of Richter that we could act out now.
Maybe if she were to guide us through the process, her fear will be lessened. And if she can't do even that, maybe we should delay the consummation to not ruin the experience.
>>
>>5361812
>Hold back. Keep yourself in check. This was new to both of you, and below the psyching up, maybe you had to be careful, frightened, too…
Really hope this is "take things slow" as opposed to "continue circling the drain" like they've been doing these past months.
And hopefully once we've got the awkward virginal fumblins of round one outta the way, Richter will be able to unleash that "amorous reckoning", as it were.
>>
>>5361812
>Hold back. Keep yourself in check. This was new to both of you, and below the psyching up, maybe you had to be careful, frightened, too…
>>
>>5361812
>Hold back. Keep yourself in check. This was new to both of you, and below the psyching up, maybe you had to be careful, frightened, too…
>>
>>5361832
+1
Hopefully this is just a first time thing, and whatever she's afraid of goes away after or perhaps during this.
>>
>>5361812
>Hold back. Keep yourself in check. This was new to both of you, and below the psyching up, maybe you had to be careful, frightened, too…
Supporting >>5361839 's idea of suggesting Richter try some kind of role play, if that were make things more fun and get Maddy into the spirit
>>
>>5361832
>>5361841
>>5361886
>>5361894
>>5361924
Do it gently.

>>5361839
>>5361932
Ask if she's into something.

Roll a d10. Only one, first come first serve. Endurance. Then, gonna write.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d10)

UOOOOOOH
>>
AAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHA
LADS, I'M SO SORRY
IN OUR BEST UNIFORM TOO
>>
Rolled 10 (1d10)

>>5361959
>>
>>5361959
Incredible.
>>
Final thoughts lingered as you shuffled your underclothes off and knelt over Maddalyn, trying to keep yourself in check, to not just dive in as much as your lower half demanded. She was frightened- perhaps, to make her more comfortable, you had to share in that…at least for a little while.

You lowered yourself, touched her, guided yourself forth.

“Hn…” Maddalyn made a discomforted squeak as you became one.

Her body resisted, but you pressed forth as steadily and gently as possible, holding her closer, consoling her trembling best as you could…but she was so warm within, so soft, and the difficulty of the act made it so much more enticing…and you eased yourself, testing, further.

“Hgh!” Maddalyn quivered with a pained gasp, “O-ouch! Stop!” She put a hand on your chest and turned her head away, “St-stop a moment…”

You obeyed, dismayed, but her noises were so cute, even if they were discomforted, small, and she continued to squeeze you so tightly within her, just with how small she was within. When you swayed back and forth but a few more times, you felt yourself losing control, so quickly you couldn’t stop…

“U-urgh…” you sputtered, “Ah…” You gripped Maddalyn to your chest as you felt your mind slip away, for a few moments of ecstasy, and you remained linked for another minute, still twitching, still gulping air… “S-sorry…” you apologized, withdrawing, and looking down between Maddalyn’s legs. There was blood…and plenty evidence of your lack of endurance. Judge Above, could you have not lasted even two minutes? She did feel incredible around your manhood, in the time you lasted…

“I…” Maddalyn looked sideways, “It’s alright. I was…it only hurt for a minute, this way…”

“Hm,” you lay down beside her, and let her nestle against your chest, stroked her back, “I suppose I didn’t want to hurt you, so…” Yet it couldn’t end like that, could it? You had the rest of the night to yourselves, though it certainly felt like she’d already drained you dry. “If you want to keep going….is there anything you’d like to be indulged in? To make it more comfortable for you?”

“…There’s something,” she said, but she shook her head. “I don’t think you’d want it right now. It’s not a good idea, I just have to…get over it.” She looked into your eyes, still melancholy, but better than the look she had before you had taken one another’s virginity. “Was it that good..?”

Or you were just that bad. “For me, at least.”
>>
Maddalyn pushed her head into your chest, rubbed her hand on your shoulder, “It’s my favorite part, you know…the catch in your voice, how you shiver, and melt into me, how your body tells more than words could…I love how I make you feel…”

She’d expressed this before, and you weren’t sure if it was a pity you wanted right now. As you recuperated, you tried to understand one another, talked, stroked and caressed one another, though you ever felt that fear, the tension in her body, and the apprehension in her eyes, that wasn’t willing to tell you all there was to her feelings, even when you made a second attempt at properly making love, while she wasn’t too sore to stand more.

-----

Elsewhere, another soul, briefly…

You didn’t understand it.

No, you knew what might be going on, but it felt so wrong. He wouldn’t do this. He wouldn’t make a promise and then…just blow it off. Not unless he wanted to drive you away. Make you angry. Exile you from his life and future.

You wore your uniform as best you could. Stood at attention outside the wedding, where Richter and his new wife had long left, the sun setting, most people having left the ceremony for the city.

He said he’d be there…

“Hey, Fluffy,” Hans, Richter’s old crewman called to you as he and a bunch of others were leaving, “What are you standing out here for? Blue bloods get to you that bad?”
“Nah.” You didn’t want to talk.

“We’re going out on the town,” he walked closer, leaned on the wall next to you, “Get some drinks, snack food. C’mon. You look like you got dumped.”

“No I don’t,” you bristled, “That’s retarded. Dumped by who?”

Hans shrugged. “Your choice, fluffy. Nobody’s gonna complain about having a girl along. ‘Specially not you.” He turned and started to walk back to the group.

>No. You were waiting here. He’d come. You knew it. You’d already waited a while, you could go until you fell asleep standing up.
>Fuck it. This wasn’t the first time somebody hadn’t been what you hoped. At least you were wanted, over with the boys.
>You didn’t want to be here, or with anybody else. You wanted to be alone. (Where?)
>Other?
>>
>>5361979
>No. You were waiting here. He’d come. You knew it. You’d already waited a while, you could go until you fell asleep standing up.

I'm not particularly a Magnus and Anya person but she'd wait imo.
>>
>>5361979
>Other
Can we leave a message with a servant or guard telling Magnus where to meet us if he shows up later? We can meet him at some conspicuous spot in the city later tonight. Then we just need to avoid getting so drunk that we forget to go there at the proper time.
>>
>>5361979
>No. You were waiting here. He’d come. You knew it. You’d already waited a while, you could go until you fell asleep standing up.
please don’t be dead…
>>
>>5361979
>No. You were waiting here. He’d come. You knew it. You’d already waited a while, you could go until you fell asleep standing up.
Lol Hilda managed to get out of her curse and now it's Anya's turn.

>>5361978
>“I don’t think you’d want it right now. It’s not a good idea, I just have to…get over it
Hmmm, clearly she means cunny-lingus. But what if there was another way of pleasuring a woman with one's tongue? A... darker path?
>>
>>5361979
>Fuck it. This wasn’t the first time somebody hadn’t been what you hoped. At least you were wanted, over with the boys.

Do you remember how ya'll voted for Magnus to go for his hitherto unmentioned childhood friend back home instead of Anya?
>>
>>5361979
>>5361992
Have a drink, kick a man in the balls. Who knows, maybe it will summon him.
>>
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>>5361979
>Fuck it. This wasn’t the first time somebody hadn’t been what you hoped. At least you were wanted, over with the boys.
With the addition of >>5361992's note idea
As much as I'd love for Anya to have her happy reunion tonight I think the milk is already spilt so there's no use standing around all night when the crews already offered to take her out.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d2)

>>5361983
>>5361997
>>5362000
This is hardly the worst place you've waited for a while.

>>5361992
>>5362015
>>5362142
Get somebody to take a note.

>>5362008
>>5362015
>>5362142
Having such high standards is bad for the spirit.


Flipping, then writing, 1 for staying, 2 for going. I'm assuming >>5362015 with the mention of kicking men and drinking is a matter of going with.
>>
>>5362266
On second thought, I'm thinking that leaving a note is probably in the "go" camp, so I'm going with that. If I'm misinterpreting though feel free to say so.
>>
>>5361979
>Fuck it. This wasn’t the first time somebody hadn’t been what you hoped. At least you were wanted, over with the boys.
Leave a message, it doesn't mean he won't come but simply waiting here won't cut it.
>>
You watched the group get smaller, grit your teeth. He said he’d be here, you thought, and you’d be waiting…you wanted to be the first to see. What if he died? Bullshit. That wouldn’t have happened, you shot back inside your head. You’d gone back so recently just to make sure that didn’t happen. Went yourself to see where that girly haired knight had gone, threw yourself and some of the old band into the fire, shot at whoever had gotten in the way with that abandoned Netillian tank that you and those hogs had gotten to. You’d never been much a believer in an arbiter of good for good people and punishment for the evil- it seemed too good to be true, especially with your early lot in life, but Hell had been upset by that denial. Schweinmann had reframed it in a way easier for you to digest, that you’d chosen to stick with. If there wasn’t a hell to go to, then all the evil people in the world got off free when they died.

That had been a worse reality than you came to want to accept.

That piece of shit god hiding wherever he did had earned some points when you were lucky enough to find that way to get to Magnus, though. You knew he was alive, and that he’d get here…it just wouldn’t be fair otherwise.

If he didn’t come then fuck him, you tried to rationalize in your head. Some people just didn’t like you. A lot of people, actually. He’d told you somebody already snagged him, but it was somebody he admitted he hadn’t seen in a while, hardly knew for years. Was that really worth it for him?

Then, he could have that, you smoldered and seethed, after all, if you actually liked him, shouldn’t you want him to be happy? He’d be happier with you, wouldn’t he?

You tried not to think about it all. How he’d defended you against his men, how he’d danced with you, talked with you, roamed the night, when you were on different sides of a war, he let you go without any tricks. Thought more. How he wasn’t tied to a particular country, but an ideal, how he followed where the wind blew, steered his own course even through danger and battle. How badly you wanted somebody who would come with you wherever you went.

Everything told you that he was worth whatever fight there was to have for, but if he didn’t even show up…

“Hold on a sec!” you called, having an idea as you went to the gate guards to the hilltop villa, like a fort over a city. Probably was, once. “Hey, you, halberd guy,” you pointed to a guard as you approached, “You got some paper or somethin’? Somebody’s gonna be here, and I need this given to ‘em.”

For once in your life, you weren’t given sass. They knew who you were. “Yes, m’am?”
>>
“A sexy- uh, pretty guy with long black hair tied in a braid, wears a blue sash, has blue eyes and walks like…” you trailed off, “His name’s Magnus Edelschwert. When he comes around, you give him that note, tell him to meet me at that place, at that time. Yeah?”

The guard accepted the paper, but he had a look of pity that infuriated you. “It’s quite late, m’am. I believe he wouldn’t come to a place where the event will surely be over soon, for most.

“Just…do it,” you pointed at him, “Alright? Alright.”

It left some hope open. Meant you didn’t have to accept what might have happened, despite your faith. You didn’t want to lose that, just in case he did come, and you had been the one to abandon him…what would he think of that? It made your legs heavy as you walked to catch up with the men you’d fought along with, to think about. No, you were still waiting…you just had to not get too drunk.

Maybe some liquid courage would make sure you could do what you wanted when he got there.

-----

Two beers down. A third one in the hand. They were easy to take when they were given for free to your group. It made you talkative- and the guys were nothing if not eager listeners, so you ended up telling them where you’d been. How you had been entered into the Archduke’s Own Panzer Academy, but your doubts had carried you back to Netilland, to find the mercenary group you once called home, and got their help again. They always seemed willing, but…you couldn’t go back like they wanted. You just couldn’t.

The last time you and Magnus had talked, he’d pissed you off. He told you he had to stay in the war. That he couldn’t do what you wanted him to do. Told you about Yuliana, his silver haired girl, and his twelve year promise. Told how you couldn’t understand how he could be tied down to something that mattered so little to where he was now.

It was an angry, sputtering story by then. Maybe some men expected you to cry, but you refused to do that. You were a warrior, and no warrior ever got what they wanted by having a pity party and bawling. That was what stupid, weak people did, when they didn’t have the strength to carve their own path in the world. Maybe you were a bit stupid, but you weren’t weak. Not even with a bum arm.
To be honest, you shouldn’t have been this deep in the cups, but Mal was here. Mal wouldn’t let anybody here take advantage of you getting tipsy. This tavern was full of people you knew, or who those people knew. Complete strangers were few and far between.

“You givin’ Mal pretty eyes, Fluffy?” Hans said, on your left side, standing at the same bar as you in this tavern, echoing with smooth, mournful wind instruments. “I think he’s more your type than that girly man.”
Malachi waved his hands in denial.

“Well, I’m not his type,” you said what everybody knew, “Hair’s not green enough.”
>>
“You’re green where it counts,” Hans said with a mocking chuckle, and you felt his hand take a tight hold of your butt. Clever little shit, he was on the side of you where you couldn’t swing an arm back and wallop him. Not so clever, he forgot that you preferred using your feet anyways.

So Hans was sent to the floor in a two-part retaliation, where your heel shot up to his crotch and you tangled his legs up with that same foot as he weakened at the knees, sending him sprawling to the floor. The other lads appreciated the show with mocking laughter.

“Swear you like getting whacked,” you scowled, “Aren’t you plowing Stein’s sis? Thought you were more about the chest.”

Stein coughed, though he wasn’t next to you.

“I don’t wanna bed you, Fluffy, no offense,” Hans groaned as he pulled himself off the floor, “I’m thinkin’ of getting her back soon, actually. Figured somethin’ out. With the new unit, she might have a place back here. Stein convinced me to at least try it, though I don’t know if she’ll bite. ‘til then, I’m still on the prowl, like you ought to be.”

You rolled your eyes. “I ain’t on no prowl.”

“I hate to break it to you,” he said in response, “But you’re single. I didn’t hear you sayin’ you put a ring on ol’ Edelschwert. Still don’t know what you see in him.”

“Piss off,” you growled, “…he’s handsome. He’s got long, black hair, and he carries himself like he could fight the world.” He reminded you of him. Maybe that was why you got stuck in the first place, and nobody you told was any help.

“And if he doesn’t think the same of you?” Stein asked from down the way.

“…”

“Ey.” Malachi chirped a warning. “Donnese.”

“It’s cool, Mal,” you said, wondering how much tighter you could hold this glass before it smashed apart in your fingers. That’d be nice to have happen now.
>>
“I mean, what’s the plan,” Stein pressed, drawing a circle on the bar with a finger, “You going to pine over one guy your whole life that doesn’t even think the same way? Doesn’t sound like you.” He was right, you hated the idea of that. You’d have to look yourself in the eye in a mirror and slug yourself in the face as hard as you could, if it turned out that was how it was. “If you’re lonely, give somebody else a try. If you don’t like them, drop them. They’d probably expect it.”

How the hell did he know about…no, he didn’t, never mind. He was right, it only had to be for a day, but…you’d never initiated any of those. “Whatever.” Maybe you only were considering it because you were two and a half down on dark stout.

>Alright then. To hell with it. Time to test the waters, just in case… (Who to hit on? There were grey uniforms and black and blue both, a few brown…)
>No, you weren’t about to admit defeat like that. He’d come around, and you’d force the matter. If it wasn’t worth fighting for, was it worth it anyways? Though you’d have to try and sway him somehow, surely… (How?)
>Everybody could just screw off. You weren’t here to fish for dates. Draw that line in the sand. You were fine. For now. It definitely didn’t hurt, or at least, you wouldn’t admit it. Even the guy you were waiting for, you didn’t need that way, you’d decided.
>Other?
>>
>>5362375
>Everybody could just screw off. You weren’t here to fish for dates. Draw that line in the sand. You were fine. For now. It definitely didn’t hurt, or at least, you wouldn’t admit it. Even the guy you were waiting for, you didn’t need that way, you’d decided.
>>
>>5362375
>No, you weren’t about to admit defeat like that. He’d come around, and you’d force the matter. If it wasn’t worth fighting for, was it worth it anyways? Though you’d have to try and sway him somehow, surely… (How?)
Are there people around that know Edelschwert? Maybe any Netillians that got invited? Maybe we can ask them about him to get more of a gameplan. Otherwise, she can become pen-pals with him? Regularly writing and getting to know him, and sharing experiences and what she is learning and how she is doing at the academy. Maybe even meet up during breaks? It gets boring out on the field of battle when you're not fighting, I'm sure he'd appreciate the extra letters and friendship, especially if it's with a woman he might find attractive.
>>
>>5362375
>Other?
How about you just chill out? You left the letter and either he'll be here or he won't. Until then there's no need to preen yourself like some sorta hen or break glass with your bare hands or even drink yourself into a stupor. You're at a fun place, with fun pals of yours. Let those worries go and dance, play some gambling games with the boys, or something. It's your favorite idiot's special day and you shouldn't let what may or may not be a misfortune piss you off enough to keep you from having a good time! Assuming having a good time doesn't involve getting too drunk.
>>
>>5362375
>You going to pine over one guy your whole life that doesn’t even think the same way? Doesn’t sound like you.
Lol. Lmao, even.

>>5362375
>Alright then. To hell with it. Time to test the waters, just in case… (Who to hit on? There were grey uniforms and black and blue both, a few brown…)
Hmm, can't think of any names in particular but maybe someone with a von? If there are any here, there are plenty of guys Anya could be into among Richter's peers, if she got to know them better.
If she doesn't have any luck on that front how about seeking out a certain cyclops? Kill two birds with one stone haha.
>>
>>5362450
Couldn't we both still try to get with Edelschwert somehow and also look around locally? Until we actually get involved with someone that is.
>>
>>5362375
>>Everybody could just screw off. You weren’t here to fish for dates. Draw that line in the sand. You were fine. For now. It definitely didn’t hurt, or at least, you wouldn’t admit it. Even the guy you were waiting for, you didn’t need that way, you’d decided.
>>
>>5362375
>Everybody could just screw off. You weren’t here to fish for dates. Draw that line in the sand. You were fine. For now. It definitely didn’t hurt, or at least, you wouldn’t admit it. Even the guy you were waiting for, you didn’t need that way, you’d decided.

At least until we see if he comes by. No use pining if it was never meant to be but the hope doesn't have to die yet. I'd agree to writing him and seeing what the fuck happened.
>>
>>5362410
>>5362569
>>5362597
No dates for you. You're single and picky as hell, and you'll stay that way if you want. Unlike your sister.

>>5362421
Look around for anybody who might know him. Think about correspondence.

>>5362450
Prowl about for somebody of...noble, bearing.

>>5362424
Lose at Vier-Sechs and get liquor shots drunk out of your bellybutton.

Writing.
>>
“Screw off,” you muttered darkly, “I’m not here t’ fish for dates. Leave me alone. Not waiting for any dates, either.”

That was the line you wanted to draw. So people would stop reminding you. Were you still waiting? Yes, and you’d head to the spot you’d arranged, at the bridge over the river. You hadn’t lost faith yet. Keeping your mind on it was just pissing you off, though. He’d either be there, or he wouldn’t. Until then…you’d been invited to enjoy yourself. May as well try.

There weren’t any Netillian uniforms around- nobody who’d know any better where he was than you did. Hell, you’d have been the last to see him, when you went back to Netilland after being enrolling at the Academy. Moping turned to plotting- even if you were rejected, you didn’t want that to be the end. Maybe you could write letters back and forth? You’d never done that with anybody, except very seldomly with Alina, but maybe?

That just put your mind back on him. You ought to test the waters, you thought to yourself- not trying to catch anybody, not to hit on anybody, but just to…see what there was. Besides, you were supposed to be at an after-party of sorts. Everybody here knew Richter- and you were his Retinue, which meant you were as close as could be. Maybe closer than even his wife. Where the hell had she been when he’d been at war, after all. If you loved somebody, the least you could do was stand by them when…never mind.

You left the bar, carrying a half empty glass with you, and poked about, looked amongst the officers, mostly because they tended to be the nicer ones to look at. As the only one with a pair of tits here, you could be choosy if you wanted. The eye drew to somebody you recognized- but didn’t know.

“Hey, you,” you said to the man with dark gold locks to his shoulders, along with a weathered, bandaged man who must have been his brother. “You’re that guy who kissed my hand back at Richter’s house.”

“She doesn’t remember your name, brother,” the older one glanced across the table, “You’re losing your touch early. Is this some poor girl you dropped a bill on?”

“Nonsense,” the younger, prettier one scoffed, “Do you know this woman, brother? She is Anya Nowicki. Don’t you remember me, Lady Nowicki?”

Lady Nowicki. You could only stand that from some people, but this guy was lucky. “Errr…”

“Karel Van Halm,” the older one saved you, “I’m Oskar Van Halm. I got knocked out of Richter’s platoon before Sundersschirm.” He pointed to the medal on your chest, “You know how she got that, little brother?”

“The Von Rotehofs told me,” Karel said, a frown crossing his face, “…Judge Above, will you not stand for a wounded girl to sit?”

“Don’t care,” you sat on the table edge. “Hey, hand smoocher. Where do y’know Fairy Boy from, eh?”

“Fairy boy?”
>>
“She’s talking to one right now.” That got a laugh out of you, though you had to bite it back. It was a familiar sort of sibling pummeling, and you liked doing it yourself when you could.

“Not talking to a baked boy at least,” Karel said, though he looked to you when he said it. “I know Richter from the Academy. He wasn’t much a merit student. Antisocial, not a high scorer on exams. He could think for himself, though. In the final exercise, as we graduated into officers, his was the sole platoon to not embarrass itself on his side. He might have snatched victory, if he were only a more creative thinker,” he put a hand on his chest, pridefully, “I beat him. Though my service record is admittedly far more mundane than his. If I were matched with him again, I probably wouldn’t do so well, if what everybody else says about him is true.” He returned your question to you. “You weren’t around at Academy. When did he come to know you?”

“When he went to Sosaldt,” you said, “It’s a long story. His uncle adopted me, and we sort of…drifted together, I guess. I was visiting my sister and I’s hometown when he led a Republic raid before Todesfelsen got knocked over. Caught me. Decided I’d join up with him, and when we came back here, he had me made his Retinue. It’s a decent paycheck.”

“It’s not about the money though, is it,” Oskar said knowingly.

A shake of your head, small and slight. “Nah. He’s…I dunno. My cousin? My little bro? Something.” You looked back at Karel. “So do you just go around kissing hands, or what’s with that.”

Karel was confused, then amused. “Did I steal my lady’s first kiss?”

“No,” you said, and decided to share because you had emptied two glasses before the one you held. “When I was living in Lark, my home town, and my sister was real little.” After your mom died, a year before Alina was abducted and your life was changed forever. Your breasts were growing out. That had made some boys interested. “One of the boys around town said he’d give me a mark if I kissed him on the mouth. I was poor. So I did it.” A single union mark could buy a lot, for you. It meant a bit of a break from pickpocketing and trash picking.

“I’m sorry to hear that,” Karel bowed his head.

“Maybe a kiss would make it better,” his brother teased him. He was more relaxed. Less formal, but his fancier pants brother deferred. Uncommon for the blue bloods, you’d seen and heard, who shunned rougher natures. Which is why Grumpus acted so strict around you. “Hey, Anya. You grew up in Sosaldt?” You nodded. “You lived a while there, then? Why wouldn’t your parents take you out?”

“They died.” You said flatly, hesitating to reveal the truth of your mother.

“When you were how old?”
>>
“I dunno. When my sister was six.” You knew how old Alina was. You’d cared to count the days and check the months, unlike your mother had for either of you. You were old enough to do so. To care, to remember.

“How old are you?” Oskar pressed more. He was trying to piece together a story. So you told him.

“I dunno.” You didn’t know your birthday, either, but you knew Alina’s- March fifteenth. She was nineteen now.

“You’re a retinue,” Karel pointed out, “You have to have a date of birth to put on your papers for that. What did you put?”

>March Fifteenth. 1908. Sharing your birthday with your sister made celebrating it easier. It made you, according to one government, twenty five years old.
>June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.
>Birthdays weren’t a big deal to you growing up. So you’d taken the suggestion from the hogs to put it on a Langenachtfest day. December 21st. It was near the end of the year, which you figured with a birth around 1910 made you twenty two.
>Other?

As you thought about your answer, a tap came on your shoulder. “Hey, fluffy,” Hans raised a hand in greeting, “We need a Blackjack dealer. You wanna do it? Make some marks?”

You narrowed your eyes. “What’s the catch.”

“There’s no catch,” he said innocently, then looked sideways. “Well. Look, if anybody loses against you, you take their bet.”

“I don’t have much money.”

“Yeah, but see, if they win, they get to drink a shot off your stomach.”

“…” You could try some card sharp tricks and frisk a bunch of dumb men…or you could just ask the question the drinks in you asked. Which was, who cares? Just do it. Live a little.

>You’d clean them out. Say you’d do it. (Cheat)
>What was gambling if you didn’t stand a chance to lose anything? You’d deal. (Don’t Cheat)
>Tell the guys to drink their shots out of each other’s arses. The only drinks getting on you would be on your lips.
>Other?
>>
>>5362868
>June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.

>Tell the guys to drink their shots out of each other’s arses. The only drinks getting on you would be on your lips.

I'd just cheat...but in case they're doing the same, I don't wanna risk it.
Besides, these idiots need to get used to Anya as a proper soldier and peer, before they get anywhere near her abs.
>>
>>5362880
+1
>>
>>5362868
June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.
>Tell the guys to drink their shots out of each other’s arses. The only drinks getting on you would be on your lips.
>>
>>5362868
>June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.

>Tell the guys to drink their shots out of each other’s arses. The only drinks getting on you would be on your lips.
>>
>For once in a lifetime, Anya shows any interest in romance
>People immediately shut it down for her
wtf?

>>5362880
+1
>>
Speaking of birthdays, what's Richter's?
>>
>>5362868
>June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.
>Tell the guys to drink their shots out of each other’s arses. The only drinks getting on you would be on your lips.
>>
>>5362912
Because it's funny.
>spends so much time not caring or disregarding feelings and mushy shit
>can't get any so she becomes a femcel
>>
>>5362868
>June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.
>What was gambling if you didn’t stand a chance to lose anything? You’d deal. (Don’t Cheat)
>>
>>5362880
I'll support this
>>5362912
For me at least I want to see if Mag actually does show up, or if he doesn't then hear his excuse. If he's gay for Yuliana then we dump his ass.
>>
>>5362868
>>June Sixteenth. 1909. June Sixteenth was the day you were rescued by Hell in 1923. You never wanted to forget it. It would make you almost twenty four.
>Tell the guys to drink their shots out of each other’s arses. The only drinks getting on you would be on your lips.
>>
>>5362880
>>5362884
>>5362900
>>5362907
>>5362912
>>5362941
>>5363052
>>5363082
If you like this guy Hell so much why don't you marry him.

>>5363009
The dissent.

Writing.

>>5362934
>Speaking of birthdays, what's Richter's?
That's a similar vague point in time that hasn't been defined, but it is a concrete date. It'll need to be decided eventually- in the way Richter would define- by its adjacency to an important historical event.
>>
“If you want to drink shots out of anything,” you sneered at the radioman, “Drink it out of each other’s arses.” The temptation was to scam them out of their money for being stupid, but you didn’t have a plan for what might happen if they were cheating too. That wasn’t something you could prepare ahead for, so the risk wasn’t that much less than if you didn’t cheat at all. Besides, if anybody here wanted to get anywhere near your belly button, there was a strict time requirement to actually know you before you’d consider anything like that.

The ones who you would let slurp a drink off of you probably wouldn’t be playing anyways.

Hans threw up his hand. “Alright then, don’t complain later when you want to go to the jewelry store.”

You stuck your tongue out at him, then looked back at the two better men. “What was I talking about?”

“Your birthday,” Karel prompted you, looking a bit glummer. Hmph.

“June Sixteenth, 1909,” you said, “That’s what I put for the retinue info. It’s not my real birthday. It’s the day Heller Von Tracht, Hell Git, found me. So it may as well be my birthday.” You never wanted to forget the day, the hour, that the man had stumbled into your life and ripped away what had once imprisoned you.

“Twenty three, almost twenty four,” Oskar said to himself, “You don’t look that old, to be honest, but that was the same of the bride today, wasn’t it? Looks the same as her sister even though she just passed eighteen herself, and she hasn’t changed in…want to say four years. D’you know Maddalyn Von Blum at all? You’re the groom’s retinue, and all. You must’ve met.”

“She doesn’t like me,” you said. The feeling would have been mutual if it was just disregard, but damn, that runt really hated you. To the point that it just wasn’t worth the trouble to get near her. She wasn’t the sort of person you could set straight with a solid punch under the sternum when all else failed. “That’s all there’s to say.”

“It’s because you’re a woman who’s close, I bet,” Oskar said, putting his hands together on the table in front of him, “I’ve heard how close you and Von Tracht are. Some people just don’t got faith in themselves. You aren’t tied down either, from what I hear.”

“Nah.”

“So you owe Von Tracht a debt you said, right?” Oskar looked to his younger brother, “How about taking a load off of his shoulders?”

“Don’t be rude to the lady,” Karel crossed his arms, “There’s no need to rope her into our plot to frustrate our elders.”

“If you owe Richter a favor,” you leaned over slyly, catlike, “I could use one. Get me a drink?”

“Aren’t you forward,” Karel loosened, his golden locks bobbing. “I can’t refuse such an earnest request. What do you like?”

“Beer.”
>>
“Please,” Karel matched your slyness of gaze, “There are other ways to drink. What other drinks do you like?”

You shrugged. “Soda?”

“Fruit?”

“Sure, I like those.”

“Alright then. A Lapizlazulli Sunrise, then.”

That made Oskar laugh for some reason, because you’d never heard of that. “You’ve spent too long at home,” he said mockingly to his younger brother, “Do you expect this hole in the ground to have Vitelian sparkling wine, especially these days? Peach puree? Even blue colorant?”

“I’ll find a way,” Karel turned his lip down and stood, as though challenged to a duel, “Wait here.”

You did, finishing your stout, as you and Oskar talked about what you had been doing in Sosaldt. He had lost his tank shortly before you had found yours. Soon enough, Karel returned, holding a tall, long stemmed glass between his fingers, and with a bow, he presented it to you.

“Lady Nowicki.”

“Uh,” you took it, “Thanks. What, did they have all that stuff?”

“No. But I have my secrets.”

“Do you,” you said as you swirled the drink. “Sparkling wine and peaches?”

“A little salt, or else it wouldn’t be like that Vitelian coastal city. I confess, my brother’s right about the Vitelian wine. I could only find Delsan Sparkling.”

You couldn’t have told the difference anyways, and you sipped at it. Fruity. Light. Bubbly. “It’s good,” you said, trying to be softer about this. It was a nice thing he’d done, though you were skeptical of the man. “Thanks.”

Karel smirked at his brother and stuck his chest out. “And you would have let the lady go wanting. Maybe you have been living out in the country too long, Silver Lance.”
>>
The time was coming around for when you planned to meet Magnus- you excused yourself, and refused any escort. Even though you were feeling those three stouts and that wine cocktail pretty damn well. It felt warm, and your head swam a little every so often when you thought too much about what was coming. At least you weren’t so upset anymore. You’d need it…if he didn’t show.

A pair of Blumsburgh constables stopped you on your way, noticed you were intoxicated, but they deferred to your uniform and medal when you told them to piss off. If you got into trouble, you had a pair of derringers tucked in your waistband, a knife in your boot, that last ditch razor tucked in the underwear. Though you’d never needed that.

The bridge loomed up before you thought you’d be there. It was a smallish stone one, not very wide, enough for two lanes of traffic, and footpaths on either side, iron lamps lighting up the thing. It led out of the city, to a town on the other side, but no traffic was passing through. It left you alone, as you wanted to be. Until he got here.

You checked the time under the lamplight. Tried not to be discouraged. Late again…

Ten minutes passed, and you saw somebody approach from the north. A shadow at first, but you could distinguish them from a distance soon enough. He insisted on wearing that sash. It was a family thing.

You said nothing as he approached, passed you, turned about. You stared at one another.

“…You’re late,” you said bitterly.
>>
“I’m sorry,” Magnus said. He had a somewhat sad look. It was…prettier than usual. He was prettier than usual. What was that warmth in your cheeks? Get down from there. “I had to settle more affairs than I planned.”

“You missed the wedding,” you swayed on your feet, but caught yourself, forced steel into your legs.

“I wouldn’t have made time for that, with what had to happen. Again, I apologize. I wanted it settled, and my way clear. So you wouldn’t have come for nothing.”

Maybe being a little drunk was a bad idea. You didn’t want to be mad at him.

“So…” you said, putting your arm down by your side, “I…”

“I know you aren’t as deft with certain words,” Magnus interrupted you, “I know why you wanted to meet me here, but I don’t want to make you struggle to get them out. I have a path I want to follow, but you do matter to me. What you feel is important to me. But I have my duties, to many people. I know you disagree with that. We can settle that later.” He looked out over the river. “I don’t have time to bicker or argue. I want you to do what you’re best at. Don’t try to put it into words. Just do it. I’ll decide what to do once I know what your feelings are.”

>He was a head higher than you. Too high. Pull that braid of his so you could get those lips where you wanted them.
>Sock him one. Serves him right, for being late, for staying, everything.
>Stand still. You didn’t want anything if it wasn’t something he’d act on. You could be close, but no need to be closer.
>Other?

The picture that was meant to go with this will have to wait, I'm already late enough as is.
>>
>>5363393
>He was a head higher than you. Too high. Pull that braid of his so you could get those lips where you wanted them.
Shoot the shot, my girl.
Getting ghosted is one thing, but at least you know he liked you enough to show up.
No matter what happens now, you've won.
>>
>>5363393
>He was a head higher than you. Too high. Pull that braid of his so you could get those lips where you wanted them.

>I’ll decide what to do once I know what **your** feelings are.”

I thought he was a person of lordly caliber...
>>
>>5363432
There are two types of Men in this world.
Idiots and Von Neubaums.
Anya's just gonna have to learn how to deal.
>>
>>5363393
>Stand still. You didn’t want anything if it wasn’t something he’d act on. You could be close, but no need to be closer.

I liked her chemistry with van Helm better. Plus he doesn't have anything at home, IIRC.
>>
>>5363393
>>He was a head higher than you. Too high. Pull that braid of his so you could get those lips where you wanted them.
I think Anya just went from having too few love interests to too many. Maybe Magnus and van Halm can duel for her affection. But Magnus is more invested so it feels wrong to blow him off for a guy she had one conversation with.
>>
>>5363393
>He was a head higher than you. Too high. Pull that braid of his so you could get those lips where you wanted them.
Really appreciate Magnus here, he knows what's up.

>>5363492
I liked her chemistry with van Halm too, but maybe we just haven't seen enough of Anya and Magnus together yet. But the way I see it, it's a miracle she feels this way about anyone, so "too many" options is just fine by me.
>>
>>5363393
>Stand still. You didn’t want anything if it wasn’t something he’d act on. You could be close, but no need to be closer.
>>
>>5363393
>Sock him to get him to bend, then kiss.
>>
>>5363393
>He was a head higher than you. Too high. Pull that braid of his so you could get those lips where you wanted them.
>>
File: tcqscene210.png (2.26 MB, 1248x1400)
2.26 MB
2.26 MB PNG
>>5363397
>>5363432
>>5363457
>>5363539
>>5364002
Take what you want.

>>5363457
>>5363539
Leave it all be.

>>5363680
The fakeout.

Writing. Sort of funny to me how Karel Van Halm has a bit of support despite being in only one scene, but I'm not complaining.

Here's the standoff. In the night, on the bridge. Anya left her coat with the boys because it's a warm night. It's totally not because I wanted to draw her ass.
>>
He had come here, you thought. He hadn’t just left. Why hesitate? You swallowed, stared intensely into those blue, concerned eyes. Everything you could think to say anyways was ruse.

“Absolute shit for brains,” you muttered with a bite of your lip as you strode forward, “What the hell is wrong with you, that I have to tell you..!”

With the one good arm you had, you snatched for Magnus’s long braid of hair and tugged him down. Inconsiderate, tall man, his face was too high up, and you dragged him roughly to your level. What you wanted wasn’t something you had much practice with, but you let instinct carry you as you pushed your lips into his, held his head against yours, tugged on his lower lip. Kept him there until your hold on his hair relaxed, and you brushed your nose against his. You must have been bright red from the heat in your face, but you didn’t give a shit, as you glared right into his eyes.

He still looked like he did before, though. A flash of fear that made it through your determination- did you…fuck up? No. You kept your hold on him.

“I wish I could say this made it easier,” Magnus said quietly.

“No…” your grip tightened again, “Don’t you dare.”
>>
“Anya,” Magnus’s hand came up and stroked your hair, your cheek, “There’s nothing to be afraid of. I cannot reject you, after all of this. But I have so much more to do before this can…continue.”

Relief. All the color in your face felt like it drained out into your feet. Good thing you had fortified yourself, or else you might have embarrassed yourself. Fainted like an idiot wuss girl.

“You ain’t leavin’ just yet,” you didn’t let go of his hair, “Not yet. We have to get a drink first. At least.”

“Anya…” Magnus put his hand on yours, “You’ve already been drinking. I could taste it.”

“Oh yeah?” You pulled him down again. God, it felt even better the second time. Couldn’t he grope you, or something? For how we went all out in battle, you wanted all that reservation to come out. It had its place, like when you danced, but you wanted to rip it down now. “Come on. There’s a tavern full’a guys who want t’ see you again. T’ meetcha.”

“Anya,” Magnus said again, an apology already in his voice, “I don’t want to have to leave you like this, but I can’t stay here for long. I only ask you be patient. Let me go for only a little while. I’ll come back for you, I promise. We both have things we have to do.” Yeah. He had something he needed to do. You. He managed to push his hand into yours, though, and you let his braid go as his fingers stroked up the middle of your wrist, into your palm, then up your fingers. It made your spine tingle. “I know how strong you are,” he said as you felt your eyes go moony, “You’ll be alright. I won’t go risking anything needlessly, either. Have faith in this knight. Even if I might be late.”

>Let him go. Even if you couldn’t watch him walk away.
>Don’t let him go. Not yet. Hold that hand, even if you have to break it.
>Other?

This is the last otome game update for now, honeymoon is next.
>>
>>5364064
>Let him go. Even if you couldn’t watch him walk away.
>>
>>5364064
>Don’t let him go. Not yet. Hold that hand, even if you have to break it.

If this means Magnus is coming over to the Archduchy eventually I won't be complaining, though what he has left to do sounds slightly concerning.
>>
>>5364064
>Let him go. Even if you couldn’t watch him walk away.
>>
>>5364064
>Don’t let him go. Not yet. Hold that hand, even if you have to break it.
>>
>>5364064
>Let him go. Even if you couldn’t watch him walk away.
>>
>>5364064
>Other
An explanation. Only after he's told us what's so important it has him running off already will we let him go.
>>
>>5364064
>Let him go. Even if you couldn’t watch him walk away.
Being Anya is suffering. Anyacoin crashes, Hildatoken rises.
>>
>>5364064
>>Let him go. Even if you couldn’t watch him walk away.
>>
>>5364069
>>5364083
>>5364087
>>5364203
>>5364217
Let him go. He'll be back. He said he'd be.

>>5364070
>>5364084
Too many people have left and never come back. You can't let that happen. Not yet.

>>5364196
His business is your business, isn't it?

Writing.
>>
Your hand was tight with his. If you let go, some stupid, childish voice suggested, he’d never come back. He had to leave, though- and you trusted him enough to let your fingers slip away from his.

“Thank you,” Magnus said, as he straightened his back again, “for understanding. Going on when the past is half done…it isn’t something I can do. It might take some time, but it won’t come clawing for me this way. Or for you.”

“Wait,” you said, stepping forward into him, stumbling back, then shaking your head. You’d expected him to head off right away, but he hadn’t. “Why. What’s so damn important that needs to be taken care of? You owe it to me t’ say.”

Magnus hooked his thumb in his pocket, turned a little, not enough to go. “My home, my men. Friends and family. Yuliana. Palatenhugel is safe enough, and though Netilland and Ellowie’s wars are cooling, the conflicts beyond are not quite ready to cease. Some people won’t have a place in what’s to come. Me included, maybe. So I need to help where I can, settle what will happen, move people and things. Once it’s all done, I’ll come to see you again. Things will be different. I don’t know how much so yet. But if I leave it all now, I’ll have left myself behind. I wouldn’t dare call myself a knight any longer. Do you not prefer a knight?”

You paused. Stared. “I do.”

Magnus nodded. “I know.”

“At least,” you added, “Can you…write? So you don’t just vanish? If you send it to Richter’s dad, it should reach me. I’m staying at his place while I go to the academy near there.”

“Of course.” He almost turned, but glanced back. “Oh. I should say…you look good.”

“Huh?” You looked yourself over. “’Course I do.”

“I meant with your uniform on properly,” Magnus elaborated, “I don’t know why your stomach isn’t out, but you don’t need to show much to look lovely.”

“I. Uh.” If only you hadn’t left your coat back at the tavern, damn it. “It’s cold, that’s why.”

“Hmm…” Magnus gazed at you longer, and you felt a need to brush your hair from your eyes. “Maybe you’d be partial to going to a cold climate…goodbye, Anya. I’ll try not to be late next time.”

“Yeah. See ya.”

You watched him turn and walk, but had to turn around yourself before he went too far. Watching him go was making you feel weak. It struck you where life hadn’t hardened you, where you couldn’t place armor. It felt so much like watching the Iron Hogs leave for war that one time, before you could join them.

You were stronger now than ever before. You’d wait however long it took.

-----
>>
April 12th, 1933

It had been two days since your wedding to Maddalyn- and you hadn’t planned to stay long. A flight had already been prepared, and your things were packed. A pair of Maddalyn’s guardsmen would be with you on the trip, but you could leave them behind at will. Ideally, they would only be around to carry luggage and be assistance of last resort. After all, they couldn’t be around for all the things you intended to do. Not that you anticipated any risk in Paelli.

Somebody found you at the airfield, though, as you were waiting for the crews to finish their checks on the twin-engined leisure craft, a shining passenger plane marked well with Archduchy and Von Blum symbols.

“Von Tracht. Lieutenant.” A cold and stern voice of a woman, who you looked up to from your seat as she approached, a familiar cadence of the clicking of high heels. There was no mistaking who it was, and you stood upright reflexively.

Her black hair had gotten longer over time, and she wore it loose, going past her shoulders, sunglasses resting on her nose. A red wool jacket was worn lightly off her shoulders and a gold bangle and necklace rang off her neck and wrist, the lone splashes of color next to a black vest and trousers.

Right, the IO was in the Blumlands- of course she would have heard of this. You hadn’t exactly been timely with informing her- since you thought you were off.

“Er,” you stammered as you looked up at the Major, “Hello?”

“Off to your marital holiday, I take it,” she said. She held a small attaché case in her hand. “Paelli. To the Reich first.”

“Yes,” you said defensively, “There’s no problem, yes?”

“No,” the Major said, “You will not be expected to perform any duties there, or meet anyone. Much as some might prefer otherwise. Though it would be a good idea to be observant. The Reich is, after all, a popular monster in the closet.”

“So the Intelligence Office doesn’t consider the Reich a threat..?” you asked in a quiet tone that the Major didn’t bother to copy. To be fair, the two of you were suddenly alone.

“The Grossreich is over the mountains, straining to be held together, and has greater concerns. In the short term, no, the Reich is better as an imagined threat than a real one. There is plenty tumult to be concerned with on the east side, in Sosalia. The IO only has so many assets.” She set the case on the bench you’d been sitting at, and she opened it. “That is not to say the Reich does not consider Strossvald worth ignoring easy opportunities. So. To ensure that you are not a defenseless pup to be taken into custody by any interested in the Reich, or the chance of Revolutionaries skulking in Paelli. A take-down pistol, easy reassembled from three parts that can be distributed over your person and hidden easily. A suppressor for said pistol, if needed. Pervitin, in case of a need for extended operations…”
>>
Maddalyn and you had made love again the other night, after a break in between the wedding night and then. Extended operations were something you were having difficulty with, even if Maddalyn did not shame you for it, it was still not a point of pride. She still seemed uncomfortable, resistant, in that way her body was even if she didn't speak of it, and it made you feel ever so little like you were forcing yourself into her...

The Major hadn’t stopped listing the inventory. “Ten meters of silk cord. Invisible ink. Edible paper. A miniature file and pry bar, lock picks. A micro-torch. Tranquilizer solution. A set of cleaning supplies for blood and fluids. Condensed rations and water purification tablets.”

“It feels like my mother’s packed me lunch,” you said.

The Major changed subject, but did not acknowledge the smartass remark. “You’ve not considered swimwear, I assume.”

“Maybe.”

“You would not be able to purchase much worth looking at here,” the Major said, pointing to the mountains, “The further west one goes, the less modesty is in demand. Atom suit styles are becoming popular in the Reich. Vitelian designers and further are even more daring.”

That made you think…

>Maddalyn shouldn’t be forced into anything exposing. She probably wouldn’t like it. Besides, her pale skin didn’t need to be scorched wearing something besides what was conservative.
>If atom suits were popular, and you were going west, surely Maddalyn couldn’t object to doing as westerners do?
>Even more daring than an atom suit? You could hardly even speculate. That had to be your preference.
>Other?

“Before you leave,” the Major said, closing the attaché case with a soft click, and putting her hands on her hips. “There is nothing I need to be informed of or inquired after…yes?”

You hadn’t told anybody of your meeting with the Kaiser. As far as most knew, your stopover in the Reich was out of curiosity. Which to be fair, was not a lie, or even controversial.

>?
>>
>>5364330
>Even more daring than an atom suit? You could hardly even speculate. That had to be your preference.
I'm finna do it.
I'm finna push Richter's luck.
After being given the character trait of "quick shot", I feel the boy needs something to lighten his mood.

>Don't say exactly what Richter was up to but ask if there were any insights she'd potentially like gleamed from higher management over there. Anything specific she'd like looked into assuming Richter had access to high command....hypothetically of course.
I feel like keeping secrets from the secret service Isn't the best idea in this case, so we might as well play this as Richter taking some...initiative or some such.
>>
>>5364330
>>?
We should tell her about our plan to meet the Kaiser, same with our father in law. It probably wont be a secret for long.

>If atom suits were popular, and you were going west, surely Maddalyn couldn’t object to doing as westerners do?
>>
>>5364328
>you don’t need to show much to look lovely.
PATROLLED

>>5364330
>Maddalyn shouldn’t be forced into anything exposing. She probably wouldn’t like it. Besides, her pale skin didn’t need to be scorched wearing something besides what was conservative.
The Judge made her pale and pale she shall stay.
>>
>>5364330
>If atom suits were popular, and you were going west, surely Maddalyn couldn’t object to doing as westerners do?

>?
Even if the IO only has so many assets, there has to be a few eyes pointed toward the Kaiser, even if its just the most surface level of observation. Pragmatically speaking then I think it would be bad to not let the Major know beforehand that a meeting is going to happen. It would not be good for her to figure this out from someone that isn't us.
>>
>>5364330
>>Maddalyn shouldn’t be forced into anything exposing. She probably wouldn’t like it. Besides, her pale skin didn’t need to be scorched wearing something besides what was conservative.
Atom Suits probably don't come in childrens sizes anyway.
>?
Considering Richter's (at that time, percieved) introduction to the IO was upon turning in an identical invitation to the Kaiser's court to the one he's currently carrying, the Major probably has some reasonable suspicion at our "innocent" stopover in the Reich.
Honestly, I think we'd be safer going into this by letting her know and taking her guidance as opposed to waltzing into the presence of the Kaiser and making some wrong move by acting out at our own initiative and getting executed as a spy.
The consequences of telling her "Yeah, we won a ticket to tea with Kaiser Alexander for saving this foreign war hero, but some very sussy guy who may or may not be pretending to be dead stole it, then gave it back later for no reason and now we're cashing it in as a pre-vacation bonus" at the last minute are not going to be pretty, but I fear that our entire ass, dick and balls will be pummelled for an eternity for withholding that if we don't tell and somehow she finds out after the fact.
>>
Henrik, excuse me. The poor guy spends so much time in his ancestor's shadow I forget he's there sometimes.
>>
>>5364330
>>Maddalyn shouldn’t be forced into anything exposing. She probably wouldn’t like it. Besides, her pale skin didn’t need to be scorched wearing something besides what was conservative.

>?
The Kaiser has extended me an invitation for a short audience in Zeissenberg, yes. Personally I'm interested to see the man behind the rumours of being the second coming of Alexander.
>>
>>5364330
>Maddalyn shouldn’t be forced into anything exposing. She probably wouldn’t like it. Besides, her pale skin didn’t need to be scorched wearing something besides what was conservative.
>>
>>5364345
Make a new trend with the most lovely new model (subjective).

>>5364351
>>5364474
The new and daring, and also exposing.

>>5364358
>>5364488
>>5364501
>>5364668
Keep it modest. You're of the Archduchy, not any immodest foreigners infected by Republican swimwear theory.

Honestly I'm a bit surprised. Especially since you know a swimsuit Maddy is going to have a picture.

Also there's the more important deal of keeping your lady boss informed of what the hell you're doing over in the Reich.

Writing.
>>
Considerations of what to get Maddalyn into had superseded any thought of Intelligence Office concerns- until the Major’s inquiring gaze was unimpeded by her sunglasses. Could she see through you? It would be a late admission, but you felt vulnerable, suddenly- and the truth would be best not kept hidden from one who lurked in the shadows by default. You pulled the small gold medallion from your pocket, and showed it to the huge woman- its shine glittered in her eyes.

“Representatives of Zeissenburg have been insistent to keep this in my possession,” you said, “A reward some time ago for rescuing the war hero turned ambassador here, Zierke. I turned it over the first time, but some enigmatic man called Loch returned it to me in Sosaldt.” That was a point of hesitation- that would mean you were hiding returning it for some time.

The Major thought, turned the glasses over in her hand. “Do you expect me to berate you for not acting like a dog? You are allowed such a thing. It was better to keep it away in general. There are those in the organization that would have thought it a golden opportunity to attempt an assassination. Some believe that the death of the Henrik would cause the Reich to finish the collapse it nearly suffered after the Emrean War.” There was debate to be had on whether that would be ideal, you remembered reading.

“Well, I wasn’t thinking of punctuating an invitation for tea with an attempt on my host’s life,” you said, bemused with the idea of being used as a bomb- for such an attempt would be destroying yourself for certain, and you weren’t interested in that at all. “I can’t help but be curious of the man said to be the second coming of Alexander, for better or worse, if I’ve been directly invited for a short audience and I’m going west anyways.”

“It would have been better to know earlier as to not send some into speculating as though they were betting on Morgenhafen markets,” the Major scowled, “This is a small controversy that could be used against my superior.”

“Am I in trouble?”

“No. It’s merely an annoyance.” Though her irritation hinted that it could very well be, or have been, worse.

Though it wasn’t your problem, apparently. “Is there anything I shouldn’t do, then. Besides attempt to kill the Kaiser, obviously.”

“Don’t do anything stupid or rash.” That was obvious, too. “Diplomatically. The young Kaiser is an incredibly popular figure in the Reich. In spite of being from the Archduchy, being invited to his company makes you a celebrity. More than you already may be over there. Some might attempt to make dealings with you because of that, but that would mean trouble here, for us. Keep in mind that you have no business with the rest of the Reich save for a singular man, and you’ll save my superior and I an awful headache.”
>>
So, keep your visit brief and to the point. Easy. “I understand.”

“It isn’t difficult not to screw this up,” the Major said with a small disdain, though it didn’t seem to be for you, “I doubt you needed to be told not to, but that particular scenario would be the worst we could expect. Outside of abduction of your person, but that would be a phenomenally stupid betrayal of trust, and out of character for Henrik’s image.”

That did suddenly make you wary, considering that a past victim of abduction would be with you, but she was better guarded now, and you couldn’t think of any reason it would even happen besides paranoia over the possibility.

“Confirming my suspicions was all I needed,” the Major said, her heels clicking as she turned, “The branch of the office here is remarkably unforthcoming, and I do have to look after my freshly minted Lieutenant.” One look back, as she put on her sunglasses again. “Enjoy your holiday. Don’t let marriage smooth out all of your edge.”

The Major left, but as her heels rang out against the concrete, another set of heels came, accompanied by boots. Maddalyn approached, in a yellow and cream short sleeved dress, a thin scarf around her neck for the odd chilly spring breeze that might blow through. Her gaze followed the Major, silently, as she walked up and as she stood in front of you. Her brow furrowed.

“Who is that?” she asked.

“An associate from…the government.” Though it was clear what the turn of phrase meant.

“Oh.” She squinted, “For a moment she looked like…” she frowned, and shook her head, “No, that makes no sense whatsoever. I must have been imagining it.”

Who in the world would the Major look like to Maddalyn, considering her way of seeing? She’d been abducted by goons of the IO, yes, but not by the Major. You knew that for certain, especially having operated with her. She was just too physically distinctive to reveal herself when there was a possibility that multiple encounters might spark recognition.

“Are we ready to go?” You asked Maddalyn, leaving that thought for the flight.

She nodded. “Whenever you are. There aren’t any other people waiting for a meeting, yes?”

“None that can’t wait,” you knelt down and kissed Maddalyn on the lips, “Let’s be off.”
>>
The plane was divided into sections- the initial entry and cockpit was utilitarian, but beyond that space with equipment and luggage jammed into it, were a pair of rooms. The first was plainer, tighter- for the guardsmen, presumably. Past that, with a toilet closet and water spigot to the side, then a dining space, and finally a private room for the noble passengers that would be using this aircraft, the most heavily decorated space of all, with velvet carpeting and wood and bronze fittings along with appropriately luxuriant hardwood and cushion furniture, albeit bolted firmly to the floor, thicker walls and windows as well, to dull the noise from the large engines. Much of the plane’s space, it turned out, was more devoted to keeping a few comfortable than maximum transport capacity.

You and Maddalyn sat in your assigned space, and you marveled at just how good this cabin’s insulation seemed to block out the drone of the engines, though there was no chance at completely silencing them. It was by far the gentlest aircraft you’d ridden, as well. Military courier craft ever felt like they were attempting to buck and shake you off like a curmudgeonly old horse.

The ascent was completed, and as the plane turned westwards, you looked out the window, Maddalyn sitting on your lap, curling her hair around your finger, to the Imperial Gates, those high mountains that separated the Reich and Strossvald. You wished she could see it from here- even the spirits that gave her some form of sight could not let her peer through glass, so the portal to her must have been as dark as night, giving no view of geological majesty.

“Richter,” Maddalyn said, turning her head against you, “I don’t think I ever asked, but since…well. Since it wll be…happening. At some time. Our first child…” Despite it being cast too early for your preference, you had been sowing the seed with intention of it bearing fruit. “Have you thought about it?”

“Hilda asked me what I’d name them,” you recalled, “I couldn’t think of one I wanted in particular. Just that I didn’t want to trap somebody as dear as a child with a name, that would set an expectation. Besides. You have a right to choose, as mother.”

The last word made Maddalyn sigh and shift in place. “I want you to name the first one,” she said. “Unless it’s something awful sounding.”

You hoped you weren’t that poor at picking names. “So long as it’s a name that keeps them free from obligation, one set for them from what they’re called by, by something that isn’t really their own.”
>>
“Richter…” Maddalyn turned further to look into your eyes, “That isn’t how the world works. Not for people like us. Things like freedom and liberty and chasing one’s own dream and nothing else, that is for the common folk and the dirty blooded. Nobility are brought into this world with obligation and duty. That we are held up to our ancestors in name and expectation is no curse. It is a measure that we may live up to, exceed. If that wasn’t true, then you and I would not call ourselves Von Tracht. You would be as your uncle. You don’t consider your name and blood a chain, so why would your descendants?”

“Perhaps I am worrying too much,” you pondered as you stroked Maddalyn’s shoulder, held her close to you. “Heller was banished. But I wonder if he was happier that way? Being an only child, I had no choice. It won’t be the same for the next Von Trachts.”

“Survival is only the minimum obligation,” Maddalyn said, putting a hand over her stomach, “Von Blum is an ancient house. The Archduchy may unite the territories under the contract of ruler’s duty to their people, but do not forget. My womb bears the blood of kings. There is no choice in that, and no reason to scorn it. Even if you lay no expectations in a name, they are who they are, and if they do not have that, an orphan is no more comforted by their lack of blood-given purpose. The sons and daughters of kings ought to have no shame in ambition, especially those of family.” Her eyes narrowed. “Unless you regret marrying one of a high house?”

“Of course not.” You parried her by biting her ear. “I had no intention of offending you. I just want our family to be a happy one. Like my family is, despite how much it had dwindled.” Maddalyn was quiet, as you went from that to licking, kissing her ear, and you felt her relax, sighing as she leaned on you.
>>
It took little time to pass over the border, and for escort to arrive- outside the window, a pair of angular Grossreich Jagd-220 interceptors flew, adjacent to your craft. The fierce looking fliers bristled with armaments, close enough to see the cannon sticking out the nose and the four machine guns in the wings- they threatened with appearance alone, even without consideration for how they were a development further from already quite nasty fighter planes that performed well in the Reich’s northern wars.

The pilot of the craft with the red stripe on its tail drew close enough for you to see him- and he gave a friendly wave altogether unfitting for the intimidating machine he flew. You wondered if he knew the degree it outperformed everything that Strossvald could put up in the sky against it.

The window was shuttered.

“There are planes outside?” Maddalyn’s ear caught the whine of the other engines.

“Grossreich fighters, yes,” you said, “There’s nothing to fear.”

“Mm.” Maddalyn turned her head back to you. “What do you want for them? Your children.”

“What do you want for them?”

“I want them to be great. That means that they will not be free as you might wish. I want to know what your idea of greatness for them may be. If you would have them be like you. What you would want different from…us.” Maddalyn paused. “Whether boy or a girl.”

>?
Also
>Talk about/do anything else on the flight?
>>
>>5365660
>?
It might be a whimsical and sentimental thought, but I'd think the only thing we could wish for either a boy or girl is for them to be the best at what they love while still fulfilling the duties set for them.
For them not to just live up to noblesse oblige, but for them to be happy and well-rounded people in their own right and for people to know and recognize them for that as well as their blood and skill at battle or in the court.
If they so happen to be most interested in the military or state craft that's fine and probably the best you could hope for, but if they're not, you'd wish them to be great, legendary even, in whatever other craft they wish to cultivate. To expand the house of Von Tracht beyond a house of doomed warriors and aid to make it a name of the truely peerless in any regard they see fit.

>Talk about/do anything else on the flight?
Run that shit about the Major back. Who could she possibly "look" like?
Reverse the question, what would she want for the children?
What does she think being a mother would be like?
Additionally, would she ever want them to know about all the spooky stuff in life? It would be best if they were never to meet a soulbinder, surely, but how about them knowing of spirits and Arts and even the nature of their own mother's relationship with such things? Would that be something to keep from them?

Also, have Richter fuck her on the plane.
They already did stuff on a train, might as well hit this check too
Knowing Richter, it shouldn't be too long once the foreplay is through.
>>
>>5365660
Supporting >>5365681's answer and additional questions
>>
>>5365660
>>?
Let them be great at whatever they put their minds to. They probably can't fully escape the responsibilities of nobility but whatever they end up doing or have interest in do it well.

>Other stuff
Supporting the question about the Major, also does Maddy know about our little outcoming meeting?

Rather not join the mile high club though.
>>
>>5365681
>Reverse the question, what would she want for the children?
This is literally what happened in the last 2 lines.

The answer is alright though, if a bit vague. Can't we just say something like "It'd be real nice to keep up the family tradition of incredible warrior, but I'll love them no matter what they choose"?
>>
>>5365852
>This is literally what happened in the last 2 lines.
She says she wants them to be "great", but the question she asked was "What does greatness for them mean to you".
I wanna know what does greatness mean to her. What would she want her children to be, besides a worthy continuation of Richter's line? What would that look like to her eyes, in truth? Just them being successful warriors that don't end up dying before their time.

>Can't we just say something like "It'd be real nice to keep up the family tradition of incredible warrior, but I'll love them no matter what they choose"?
It's more than that though.
It's less about them continuing the family tradition, which admittedly, has gotten literally all of Richter's kin killed, and more about them being great at anything they want to do. About expanding what it means to be a Von Tracht, while still maintaining and improving what it already means now.
It's about them being better than their forefathers in ways Richter might not have considered, on top of being peerless in whatever noble obligation dictates they need to be.
>>
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>>5365681
>>5365730
>>5365852
I want them to be the very best, like no one ever was.
Also, what does my boss look like? Among other things, such as making your kids wizards.

The additional action probably needs its own vote to decide.

>>5365732
As above. Without the additional action.
>also does Maddy know about our little outcoming meeting?
She does.

Writing. Also, this is a picture of the Major I'd like to have had last update, but better late than never I guess.
Also I deleted and reposted because I forgot to put rendering on parts.
The only major hair hue I'm missing now is mosshead.
>>
“Maybe they can’t escape the responsibility of nobility,” you said, “But I’d like for our children to not be bound by those as they try their best to be the best they can be, no matter what they want to do. They don’t have to be warriors. My father is a lawyer. I’d rather not the family after me have to be like me, or any of my ancestors. I want the mark of Von Tracht to be peerlessness, not a house of doomed warriors.” Amongst those who weren’t even that, and were merely degenerated louts. “Does that suit your vision of greatness, Maddy?”

“Somewhat. It is incomplete. With the world we live in, have always lived in, there are two more descriptors I desire besides peerless. Invincibility, and immortality. Without those, it matters not how talented they may become. They can be shattered, and swept up by the winds of time. As your family itself almost was.” Maddalyn touched your chest, “As I’ve seen almost happen myself.”

It was a simple, easy to understand sentiment, but the source of the observation rubbed you wrong somehow. “You don’t refer to the knowledge of the Presence, do you? Your relationship with its study, the use of…arts? I do not want them to ever have dealings with soulbinders, but is everything else better kept away from them?”

Maddalyn frowned, and knitted her fingers restlessly. “I don’t know that yet. I think they will have to know, to learn. I don’t think they’ll have a choice, and they’ll need every advantage. My father and mother tried to keep their descendants away from it all, yet the Hermit came back anyways, and father housed him. At best, some children may be shielded from it, while the most talented will have to take up the studies. It’s too early to say how, but it will happen.”

That implication discomforted you. As though your accidental discovery had now cursed your descendants. You hoped that wasn’t the case, and changed subjects. “So you’d take up teaching, as a mother? What do you think it would be like?”

Maddalyn pursed her lips. “I don’t want to talk about that.” Her tone was flinty. You knew she wouldn’t be convinced to talk otherwise.

Why, though?

Despite the sudden weight of conversation, the rumbling of the aircraft and Maddalyn’s rear resting on your lap, and the kissing before, had stirred something in you. Now was an inappropriate time, of course, but…the doors had locks, the windows covers, and there was the novelty…you weighed whether it was too mad to ask, though, even if Maddalyn surely felt it from how she sat.
>>
You distracted yourself with another curiosity that appeared in your mind as you searched for other considerations. The Major. Not somebody you particularly wanted to think about with an erection, tastes be damned, but Maddalyn had said she looked like somebody. Maddalyn didn’t see faces, colors, she saw presence.

“Earlier, when you saw my associate from the government.”

“Yes,” Maddalyn said, clearly not hesitant, as nobody could listen here. “You neglected to say her name.”

“I don’t know her name,” you said, “She’s only ever been the Major. Besides that, you said she looked like somebody? Who?”

“Well, yes,” Maddalyn said, “People can have similar Presences. It’s…like having a different smell, or feeling. Just because they’re similar doesn’t mean they’re the same, and all of that…”

“Yes. But who does she look like?” You pressed.

“I said it didn’t make any sense, which is why I said what I just did,” Maddalyn said defensively, “It’s just coincidence. But her Presence seems like your father’s. Like I said. There’s nothing to read into that besides paranoia.”

Was there, though..?

>She’s right, and even if there was more to it, nobody would tell you anything more. Certainly not the Major herself.
>It sounded as though there was plenty to read into that. Maybe even something to conclude. (What?)
>Other?
Also-
>Ask Maddalyn if she’d like to make this flight more…intimate?
>>
>>5366679
>She’s right, and even if there was more to it, nobody would tell you anything more. Certainly not the Major herself.
>Ask Maddalyn if she’d like to make this flight more…intimate?
This time for real. Our honor must be regained
>>
>>5366679
>She’s right, and even if there was more to it, nobody would tell you anything more. Certainly not the Major herself.

Interesting observation though, I'd curious she'd notice anything about the Kaiser.

>Ask Maddalyn if she’d like to make this flight more…intimate?
Nah
>>
>>5366679
>It sounded as though there was plenty to read into that. Maybe even something to conclude.
Less serious implications and more lighthearted ones regarding both Sir Von Tracht and the Major being rather meticulous and pragmatic sorts. Maybe that has something to do with it? Ask if she can recall if other sorts of people have similar presences. What about Richter himself? Besides the obvious.

>Ask Maddalyn if she’d like to make this flight more…intimate?
Yes.
But before that.

>Other
What's the game plan for nobles raising a child?
Richter didn't exactly have what you'd call a normal upbringing for a young noble. Eda in particular seems like the sort to put a lot of time and care into mothering.
But what shall Richter and Maddalyn do with the resources, human and otherwise, at their disposal, at least initially?
>>
>>5366679
>She’s right, and even if there was more to it, nobody would tell you anything more. Certainly not the Major herself.
Hmm, its not much to go on. The only points of reference we really have are Emma body possession, Demiphanton shenanigans, and the clones I think for presence mixing, and none of those cases seem likely here. Does a family share a similar look presence-wise? Maybe she actually looks more like Hel, which gives a bit more options considering his presence likely is not in his own body anymore. Or Dad and the Major both got some sort of Presence treatment or something by someone or something else and thats why they look similar. Lots of speculation, not a lot concrete to work with.

>Ask Maddalyn if she’d like to make this flight more…intimate?
Sure, it is the honeymoon after all?
>>
>>5366679
>>It sounded as though there was plenty to read into that. Maybe even something to conclude. (What?)
Obviously they must be the same person. Have we ever seen the two of them together in the same place?
>>
>>5366679
>It sounded as though there was plenty to read into that. Maybe even something to conclude. (What?)
Maddy can see them glowing in the dark, the IO niggers. She hits them with her tank.

Don't fuck her in the bathroom that's nasty.
>>
>>5366679
>It sounded as though there was plenty to read into that. Maybe even something to conclude. (What?)

She's family. Jana Von Tracht is his Dad's cousin. She didn't die. The Major mentioned off camera with GerBear that she went on a mission against an Altossian crime lord. For whatever reason she chose not to come back. Maybe it's because her dad died for revenge?
>>
>>5366679
>It sounded as though there was plenty to read into that. Maybe even something to conclude. (What?)
Similar presence to our dad, and Heller's particular hand-to-hand combat style. She just might be Heller's daughter.
>Let's ask Maddy whether our own Presence is similar to our father's or mother's.

>Ask Maddalyn if she’d like to make this flight more…intimate?
No
>Other
We'll need to talk with a physician about how safe it is for Maddy to bear children with her body size. Her mother did bear two, but she also died.
>>
>>5366689
>>5366719
>>5366958
Nothing to look into, not enough to do anything about. Best leave it lie.

>>5366720
Bring up a similarity of personalities- lead into other inquiries.

>>5367036
The Major is my father???
No, she's not.

>>5367058
They certainly do glow. But so do you.
Don't worry the passenger cabin is furnished and private, no need to cram into the bathroom.

>>5367095
An interesting theory. Though it does explain why she looks similar...

>>5367163
A different type of family.

>>5366689
>>5366720
>>5366958
Break in the plane's cabin. Don't tell anybody what the two of you did on that couch.

>>5366719
>>5367163
Save it for later.

Writing.
>>
>>5367095
>She's family. Jana Von Tracht is his Dad's cousin. She didn't die. The Major mentioned off camera with GerBear that she went on a mission against an Altossian crime lord. For whatever reason she chose not to come back. Maybe it's because her dad died for revenge?
I am choosing to interpret.
>>
It'd certainly be easier to believe there was nothing more to that, but a small seam of doubt was opened up. One that you thought you could find the answer to, if only you had a little more knowledge.

“…Do family tend to have similar presence?” you asked, just to be sure. It seemed like something that would make sense.

Maddalyn paused. “Usually.”

“So do I look more like my father or mother?”

Maddalyn studied you for a moment. “It’s not like you’re an even mix, but because you’re a man, you have more of your father. That’s how some writers of arts see it- men are more influenced by fathers, and daughters by their mothers, with the opposite’s occurrence being seen as a portent, depending on other things. Your presence has been interfered with, though…”

That did inform you of something important by implication. As families were defined by the father, and succession passed down male lineage save for in exceptional circumstances, if the Major looked like your father…

She looked like you.

Your wife studied you further, must have noticed that tension in the pause. “You and your father are the last of Von Tracht, aren’t you? As I said, it can’t be anything besides coincidence.”

“No,” you shook your head, “There’s something more to it. Is any similarity in personality indicative of similar presence?”

“Not really.” Maddalyn thought, “An illegitimate child, perhaps? By your uncle?”

He’d be the sort to have it- and she somehow knew Heller’s combat style- but there was a very large problem with that theory. “Heller Von Tracht couldn’t sire children,” you said, maybe as a reminder. The Iron Hogs claimed to have his son, but Anya had doubted the veracity of that claim- and so did you. “He had no progeny.” Save for potentially adopted ones. “The Major wouldn’t be the right age, anyways. She’s somewhere in her…middle to late thirties? My father is in his mid-late forties and Hell was a similar age to him. It doesn’t line up.”

Who did then? The family had been reduced to one branch ever since about twenty years back-

A flash of realization.

Jana Von Tracht. She had disguised herself as a man, at a young age, as well. She had died in the same fateful series of tragic events that had felled her father…but what if she didn’t, somehow? Father never liked to talk about what happened to her, or if there was a body, or anything like that. You remembered when you, the Major and Gerovic were all together, Gerovic had seen something in the two of your eyes- that had made him start laughing like an imbecile.
Had he seen…the same eyes?

Thinking about it more, the Major shared certain traits with the more classical Von Tracht descriptors, like your uncle Heller had. Tall, black haired and broad. The hazy picture seemed to be getting more clear, but certain questions prevented you from being sure about it. Because if that was the truth of the Major’s identity…why? How?
>>
There was no clear answer to that, so your confidence faltered at an absolute declaration. Yet you couldn’t discount it either. What would you even do about this theory? You sat quietly a couple minutes.

Maddalyn was, unfortunately, not helping your concentration. She wasn’t trying to do it- it was just the placement of her backside. An easier thing to focus on- that didn’t give you a headache. In fact, you wanted all of that distressing and inconvenient revelation all to go away for just a bit.

A hand went to grab Maddalyn’s thigh through her dress.

Maddalyn grimaced and gave you a half lidded, weary look. “…Here Richter? Now?

“There are locks on the doors.”

“Don’t be an animal, Richter,” Maddalyn gave you a light smack on the cheek with her palm. “You’re to see the Kaiser. Are you going to do that while smelling of…”

“The Kaiser can wait,” you said, moving up the thigh to touch Maddalyn between her legs, “How often are we going to be able to do this on a plane? I’m only thinking, maybe this would be better for you…you’ve felt so uncomfortable in the bed. Maybe a change of scenery would help.”

Maddalyn said nothing, but didn’t push your hands away as you molested her. Until you touched at her breasts. “Not there,” she said softly. She didn’t let you touch them or see them- strange, and she insisted even while you had been inside of her.

“Sorry.” You said, “It’s also…a matter of pride. I haven’t been doing well by you.”

“You’ve been doing just fine,” Maddalyn leaned her back against you.

To say you disagreed would be an understatement. “I want to do better.”

“…” Maddalyn stood, and unfastened parts of her dress, motioned for you to help her take it the rest of the way off. She stood in a camisole and stockings and panties, all white, none as showy as your wedding night, when they were meant to be seen later. She hadn’t been ready for this, and she had a slight annoyance in the tautness of the edges of her lips. After you’d gone and locked the door, and sat on the recliner chair, trousers off, you let Maddalyn get up on top of you- let her take you out of your underclothes. “I can’t have you going forth with any limp in a prideful step, can I..?” Maddalyn sighed as she ground against the bulge in your briefs, and you touched her forceful strokes of your fingers through her panties…though she still felt tense and uncertain as ever. She didn't get aroused like you did when you were merely fooling about, like before the wedding.

Well, Richter you thought as you shifted her underwear to the side, How about doing it for real this time?

>Same as before- one roll of 1d10, first come first serve. At the very least, you can’t do worse in one aspect…but this is endurance, not performance. Maybe it won’t be good to go too high…
>>
Rolled 4 (1d10)

>>5367733
>>
>>5367733
Maybe it won’t be good to go too high…
So middle ground is best?
>>5367737
So this roll is pretty good?
>>
“This is so perverse,” Maddalyn muttered to you as your manhood touched against her, but she eased herself down, slowly, steadily.

You managed to endure, though she cringed as you tried to push her hips down all the way.

“St-stop,” she gasped, “That’s too far…”

Maddalyn was so tense, you thought as you touched her shoulders, her back, as she moved back and forth- this was your first time doing it like this, rather than you over top of her. It let you focus more…and the rumbling of the plane, the tension, gave your mind other things to think about besides what was going on.

“This is so dirty…” Maddalyn squirmed again.

Your wife finally settled deeper, and you leaned her back, set yourself forward, so you could kiss while she moved. Drool ran down both of your chins, and when you parted Maddalyn’s breaths were lighter, she felt better…she sighed breathy, high pitched utterances, but her relaxation was too much for you, as you pushed her down and held her tight to your chest, sputtering and trying to keep a soft whimper down as you climaxed within.

A stroke of Maddalyn’s hair, and you separated, returning yourselves to your underclothes. “Was that…better?” you dared to ask.

Maddalyn’s cheeks were flushed, and her skin was clammy, she still looked a bit annoyed. “…Yes,” she said finally, “I think being…distracted, helped.” Though you knew it could have been better- you knew well enough her orgasm, and she hadn’t reached it then, despite your better endurance. She had at least gotten past where it felt like all you were doing was hurting her…maybe that was enough to celebrate for now. “I think we should have thought about this more before you finished inside…” she said, as she pushed her underwear around.

You had no answer to that as you put your trousers back on. There wasn’t any good alternative you had besides…well, not having sex on a plane where spare clothes and baths weren’t at hand. You’d be able to take a car directly to a room to shower off anything…lingering. You’d have to stay a little bit, since the flight to Paelli from Zeissenburg would be a two part affair anyways, and apparently, escort would still have to be arranged. Paelli was close to the warring states of Vitelia, after all, and it was unsafe to merely fly about, even if the Grossreich’s Imperial Navy imposed itself where it could in the sea and the islands between, warding off any marauding Revolutionaries and Sudvitelian opportunistic mercenaries alike.
>>
“Richter,” Maddalyn said as she stood by you, waiting for you to clean up the wet spot you’d both made on the furniture with a hand cloth. “I wanted to say…”

“Hm?” you balled up the cloth and threw it inexpertly towards the wastebasket.

“When we’re making love…” Oh. Critique. “That time, I think it was better because…I was distracted. I want to ask, then…” Maddalyn wrung her hands, “I want to try…not being myself.”

“What do you mean?” You asked.

“I…it’s just, I think it’ll be better for me, if I don’t have to be me…” She gave you a sad and pleading look that was hard to argue with. “If you’d be alright with some…role play. I could act like somebody else…”

“…I don’t know if I like the idea of doing it with anybody but you,” you said, stroking her cheek, “I don’t think you do, either.”

Maddalyn pouted at you. “I’m just…too far in my head.” She was holding something back. Willing to admit to a problem- but not what it was. “Just now, I was out of things enough that…it started to not hurt. I know you don’t want to hurt me…won’t you try it? Next time we make love? I’ll let you pick what you want to do…”

It wasn’t something you felt comfortable with- and with a new clarity in your mind, you didn’t feel much need to think about sex. Yet, if it was for her…she had indulged you just now, couldn’t you indulge her?

>Ask that she just be patient. You didn’t want her pretending to be anybody else- definitely not in bed. You’d both figure it out eventually.
>Fine then. It didn’t seem to be her fetish, and it’d be harmless enough…(What suggestion to make?)
>Maybe you had to change things around in some other way. A way that didn’t require anything you had doubts about… (?)
>Other?

>>5367775
Well. "Pretty good" being subjective. After all, there's...more to it. Though not blasting the dynamite right when you get in the mine is a start.
>>
>>5367790
>Maybe you had to change things around in some other way. A way that didn’t require anything you had doubts about… (?)
Try out different positions and see what gets the best results for both?
>>
>>5367790
>>Fine then. It didn’t seem to be her fetish, and it’d be harmless enough…(What suggestion to make?)
Since she loves being her Sister so much...
>>
>>5367798
NO! Bad anon!
>>
>>5367790
>Other?
Stop being a pussy and jam it in.
>>
>>5367796
+1
I'd say we delay the role play for now, I think changing up positions has potential to work. Not to say it's off the table in the future, but this is more palatable to the both of us I think.

>>5367798
>>5367803
...no
>>
>>5367790
>>Maybe you had to change things around in some other way. A way that didn’t require anything you had doubts about… (?)
If the problem is that she's too much in her own head that sounds like something alcohol would solve. Maybe try getting her drunk next time?
>>
>>5367790
>Fine then. It didn’t seem to be her fetish, and it’d be harmless enough…(What suggestion to make?)

>>5367796
>>5367839
>>5367859
OK ok boys, hear me out.
Roleplay isn't really anything major.
It's honestly a really simple request in the grand scheme of things, and I don't want to put off trying things Maddalyn suggests, because it might discourage her from making other suggestions in the future.
Let's just try things her way, at least once.

As for suggestions, I'm not sure why anyone would jump to her roleplaying as people we know and she hates, when we could be starting simpler.
Dress her up in a nurse's outfit or something or a sexy teacher.
And if we really don't want to stray too far from Base Maddalyn, we could just have her be herself. Just, not the her she is around Richter.
Remember long ago, back at the end of the Richter's Crosscountry adventure to get Maddalyn back, where she went full princess mode and verbally ripped that border guardsman a new asshole?
How about instead of Maddalyn roleplaying as someone else, she just pretends to be an extreme caricature of herself?
It could be like a fun game, Her trying her best to be as haughty and uptight as possible while Richter works to melt that all away.

Regardless of what exactly we go with, there isn't anything inherently wrong with her Roleplay idea and we shouldn't just turn away from it for next to no reason.
>>
>>5367790
Supporting >>5367860 and himedere Maddy
>>
>>5367860
sure, I was just cautious with it because Richter and Maddy didn't seem to like it, but the way you frame how we could do it makes it seem much more viable.

>>5367790
switching from >>5367839 to >>5367860
>>
>>5367790
>>Fine then. It didn’t seem to be her fetish, and it’d be harmless enough…(What suggestion to make?)
>>5367860
I like the idea of Maddy playing up a sort of aspect or herself or who she could be. I think it gives some options for Richter to lean into a role too, maybe as the roguish Kommandant he sort of is and is not if we wanted.
>>
>>5367796
Maybe there's another idea you could get behind.

>>5367798
I mean, it's not hard for you to pretend to be your sister, right?

>>5367803
Attempt to follow the tactical doctrine of an all out assault.

>>5367859
Get her wasted. Then waste her.

>>5367860
>>5367862
>>5367863
>>5368285
Remember that thing you did? Do it more. Give me my princess.

Writing.
>>
Despite your doubts, you didn’t want to deny Maddalyn an idea- especially one that would lead her to actually find more joy in something you absolutely did not want to cease doing. Though you pondered for a minute, pretending to be somebody else…sat wrong with you. There was an alternative that you thought of, when given the idea- one that would result in no identity based discomfort for either of you.

“I’ll tell you what I’d like,” you told Maddalyn, and her expression brightened. “I want you to be like yourself.”

Maddalyn’s mouth hung open like she’d just been stuck between the eyes with a hammer. “…What.”

“You don’t act like you do around other people with me,” you explained, “I’ve seen you be aggressive. I remember when you’ve acted as forcefully as you could. Do that. Don’t be so meek. I want to see a proud, powerful, aggressive princess come out.” You paused, as Maddalyn blinked skeptically at you. “At least, in bed.” Failing that, there were…other things, but this felt like it had some magic in it.

Quite honestly, you could already imagine it.

Maddalyn’s eyes drifted sideways, and she touched her elbow modestly. “I try not to act like that with you…but if you think it will help, I’ll try it. Next time.”

You nodded, bent down and gave her a kiss. “Let’s get you back into that dress, sticky princess.”

“Hmph.”

-----

The clouds were sparse in the sky, and when the plane was near the completion of its southwards leg (veering additionally west to avoid intruding upon Valsten), you saw the city where Alexander had sprung from, the capital of the Grossreich, Zeissenburg. The Imperial Jewel City, the home of the Kaisers. It sprawled in a hollow between foothills and mountains, beside and over a river, and you could see from above how many times the old city had swollen outwards and burst, each ring newer than the last besides where newer construction and expansion had swallowed sections of once isolated old architecture.
>>
Strosstadt was not nearly so old a city. It had been but a town when Alexander’s planners made it the hub of his Sosalian conquests to that point, so there were precious few pre-Reich buildings there. Here, you could see hundreds of years from above, perhaps, if you looked in the right places, a thousand or more years. Yet you were not here to sightsee. The only thing you were scheduled to see was the man who ruled from this seat of the Empire.

The Imperial Palace was recognizable from up high, its stark white alabaster and glittering bronze and aluminum and its peculiar style of architecture making it unmistakable, but you were surprised to see it given so little space to itself. It looked as though the city was threatening to swallow it up, though none of its company were ugly, industrial developments. The only space wider than a street that the Imperial Palace seemed to be allowed to itself was the front courtyard…where it appeared a military unit had assembled.

“What do you see, dear?” Maddalyn leaned on you, brushing her fingers over your face, studying you.

She couldn’t share this sight out the window. So you shared it with words. “The majesty of the Imperial Gate’s mountains, leading down to the Kaiser’s seat. A river flowing through the middle, like Blumsburgh, but so much larger a city. Like a great pile of pebbles of all sorts, from up here. Some parts are lovely like Nauk temples and forums, others cluttered and dirty. Boats and trucks, canals and roads. I can see the smoke from factories and forges, but they’re separate from the city, the wind blows it away. I feel like it wouldn’t be as smoggy as Strosstadt is.” There was a wonder you wished she could share in…you wondered what it might look like to her eyes, if you could set her atop one of the mountains on a clear night.

Maddalyn must have guessed what you were thinking, as she put a hand on your cheek. “It’s alright. I can see it reflected in your eyes.”

A heavy metaphor, not meant to have the particulars thought about. Reflections were one of many things Maddalyn could not see.

The plane landed, and was towed to a hangar where you were met by public servants- their dress recalled something of the military, but besides the policeman accompanying them as a guard, it was clear they were not martial men themselves. It was quickly arranged that you both be allowed to spend a small amount of time at one of the bathhouses to clean up- the excuse being made that the aircraft had gone through some temperature shifts, and a malfunction of air circulation leading to you being sweaty.
>>
They weren’t exactly going to be probing about to discover that Maddalyn had been gifted with a share of seed in her belly, though the thought of going to the bathhouse did make you ponder on more adventurous places to…have relations. Not that bathhouses were meant to be used for that, but they could only throw you out or fine you if you got caught…and the private establishments were meant to allow one’s privacy.

It was unnecessary to take your luggage, though you did grab a change of lower layers- and the attache case the Major had given you. Just in case. You had no doubt that anybody associated with Loch would try to harm you. For all his mystery seemed to have no desire to attack or imperil you, even if it would be easy for him. It was for the possibility of…anybody else.

You cleaned yourself before Maddalyn, but you didn’t wait after dressing again, putting the golden medallion on your breast, and as you went to check on her, you saw her guards standing by the door. You gave them a polite salute and they did so back.

Nothing kept you from going out. Maddalyn and her guards would go to pre-arranged comfortable quarters to wait while the air crews did their business, and while you attended your meeting. Just outside the bathhouse, you saw a familiar face- replacing the men who had given you a ride before.

He was a weary faced man with dark, sallow eyes. A Dhegyar looking fellow, with a permanent frown etched into his jaw.

“Oh, it’s…you,” you recognized the dour faced man who gave you a stiff salute, that was returned…though in your country’s style. “You’re that man from the Spout Market.”

“I am Captain Szilves Covacs of the Fourteenth Panzer Regiment,” the tired-eyed man said drily.

“I am Major Von Tracht.” The new rank raised an eyebrow. ”I also saw you in that pit fighting tournament.”

That made Covacs roll his eyes and sigh. “Of all the…anyways. That doesn’t matter. I’m only here to escort you to meet the Kaiser. I suppose gathering those of us you might have seen before was him trying to make you feel welcome.”

A welcomeness Covacs apparently did not feel like participating in. “Lead the way then, Captain.”

“Major.”

You were led into the back of a four-doored black car that bore the Reich’s seal on the front- the driver was clearly a military man from his uniform and cap, though not the same as Covacs’. The Captain moved in after you and closed the door behind him as you moved over to the next seat, and the driver immediately set the car forward.
>>
“Any reason for the change in escort?” you asked, only a little wary.

“The Kaiser wanted to see you before any other people,” Covacs said, “I can present his seal if you want.”

“No, that’s fine,” you looked out the window, saw people pointing and gossiping at the car, with you within. Dressed in your mask and Silver Lance uniform, as would be fitting for a visit to the Kaiser, you must have stood out even more than in Strossvald- a double layer of mysterious visitor. You wondered how much you must have resembled Zierke’s presence in Blumsburgh, being here.

“So then.” Covacs said, his hands hanging between his knees as he leaned forward, staring into the back of the seat in front of him, “I suppose you’re not part of that unit anymore. The Silver Lances.”

“No,” you said, “I took a promotion offer out of it.”

“Huh.” Covacs leaned back to his seat, and took a cigarette out of his breast pocket, “Some curiosity around the unit, after we got back. Said a platoon was rumored to have gone out and taken out the top Netillian Ace, some guy called Crown Taker. Don’t happen to know who took him out, do you?”

“I do,” you said solemnly, “Captain Otto Vehrlors. My platoon leader. I didn’t see it myself, I was dealing with somebody else.”

“Uh huh.” Covacs nodded to himself, “Interesting.”

He didn’t follow up, so you asked your own question. “Griffon Company or whatever it was called, it isn’t fighting anymore?”

“Can’t say I know what you’re talking about.” Both of you knew that was a load of crap, of course.

“Oh well,” you said, “If you happen to run into the commander and co-commander of that unit sometime, tell them my Retinue and I lost a lot of money betting they’d win that tournament in Sundersschirm.”

Covacs settled into the seat and put a hand behind his head, pulling out a lighter and flicking it open. “It sounds like you’re bad at gambling.”

…Maybe. You didn’t have a further retort- Covacs was just uninterested in being a conversation partner.

The ride to the palace was short, as you noticed any traffic making way, and it wasn’t long before you were taken to the front gates and the courtyard of the Imperial Palace- and you saw the unit you’d seen from the sky, prepared to receive you.
>>
Arranged in rows in the courtyard, between the two iron fences and before the grand doors, there stood what looked to be at least several hundred men, Grossreich panzers behind the reddish-ochre uniformed riflemen, of a type you didn’t know of. Whether you forgot it or if it was new, you didn’t know. You paused at the gates, glanced left and right. Yes, you were meeting the Kaiser, but you didn’t expect this sort of reception.

“Fourteenth Panzer!” An officer shouted with a raising of a baton, “Pre-sent, arms!”

The sound of the massed drill rang out as a chorus of stepping feet and rifles brought to ready attention- crew without rifle merely saluted.

“…Don’t be too flattered,” Covacs sighed, “This is the first time somebody hasn’t messed something up. Burnt edges but green as grass.”

“Your friends must really love you along for parades,” you said lowly as you walked on. Though, as you regarded the men at attention and tested a salute, you noticed something. “Why do I have the feeling somebody is missing?”

“Hunt him down if you feel like it,” Covacs said dismissively, as you finished walking to the gates. A quartet of incredibly intimidating looking men waited, clad in armor you’d never seen before, armed with submachine guns and pistols and ceremonial but very much effective looking straight swords at their waists, their very faces hidden by stern metal masks. They were all quite large- at least as much so as Von Metzeler. With a gesture to your medallion from Covacs, they made no move, barely recognizing your existence, though another four just like them were in the room beyond.

The entrance hall was a grand, two storied space, with elegant tiling decorated with floral mosaic, the walls painted with scenes of a mystic forest and lights of day within, but you noted no gold artifacts, no grand statues- there was an odd emptiness, as though part of the room had gone missing, and no new wealth had been found to replace it, their places instead taken by rather humble and innocent ornament trees and what appeared to be odd shrines to letters and photographs, documents and treaties.
>>
Covacs left without a word, leaving you with attendants who brusquely but respectfully searched you, watched the whole time by the silent figures who you presumed were an honor guard of sorts.

“Who are the living statues?” you asked an attendant as he patted down your leg.

“The Palace Circle,” he said, “They are a small group of sworn warriors, who protect the house of the Kaiser. They are so feared, that they have never had to draw steel since their founding.”
Interesting. Though they fearsome few could not protect the Kaisers from their own hands…or when they wandered out.

“The guest of honor has arrived, then.” You heard a call from the grand staircase- atop it, you saw…

Sieg, Kaiser!” The attendants all turned and raised their hands, as though grasping for a star and taking hold.

Sieg, Kaiser!” The formerly silent armored soldiers also recognized the new man.

He was a beautiful man- he looked exactly like Loch, though his hair was longer, stretching past his shoulders, tumbling down in golden-brown wavy locks. A pearly white cape stretched over his shoulders and down his back, a golden sash laid over a militaristic uniform, a deep red color, that looked like something from the last generation, though its wearer couldn’t have been beyond thirty. As he slowly stepped closer, you saw a strangeness in his eyes- a sort of playful kindness, like an old friend might look, though you were suspicious, and doubting.

“My Kaiser,” the lead attendant stepped forward, “We have not completed your guest’s inspection. Forgive-“

Kaiser Henrik Von Zeissenburg waved a hand, and quieted the fretting attendant. “You’ve done enough. I doubt that I am welcoming an assassin into my home. Rogel was ever a good judge of character, and others have decided the wisdom of this meeting already. I do hope that the Kommandant and Silver Lance liked our humble reception.”

“Yes, my Kaiser.” The attendant looked back to you, and Henrik’s dark blue eyes laid curiously to you. “Strossvalder,” the head attendant said with a note of snippy scorn, “His majesty, Kaiser of the Great Reich Henrik Von Zeissenburg, Son of Pieter II, descendant of the peerless Alexander and Grand Prince of Zeissenburg, recognizes you.”

>Would it do to be polite and to the point? A salute, Sieg Kaiser, seemed to be the right answer.
>You recognize Henrik Von Zeissenburg, but no other titles. Helman the Silver Lance broke the Kaiser’s legions so that you would not bow here.
>You saw Loch’s face, you saw Loch’s expression. So, regardless of present differences, hello again, Loch.
>Other?
>>
>>5368500
>>Other
A brief bow, but not too deep, we're not an Imperial after all. Maybe comment on his striking resemblance to someone we know.
>>
>>5368506
+1
And introduce ourselves by our current rank.
>>
>>5368506
+1
We should have asked about correct etiquette before coming here.

>he looked exactly like Loch, though his hair was longer
A brother perhaps? Or more clone shenanigans?
>>
>>5368506
Seconding
>>
>>5368525
It should be fine unless we do something blatantly disrespectful, anyway the Reich is still the boogeyman for most Sosalians so there's no need to be overly subservient. Just need to be as polite as we would towards other foreign monarchs like Wladyslaw and Richter should be good.

I suspect more magic shenanigans at work
>>
>>5368500
The title is impressive but I do not believe we owe any fealty to this man. Still, he did invite us into his country and home so he still deserves respect.
>>5368506
The middle ground seems best here. Especially if too much of a display could send the wrong message with a person who may at least nominally be laying claim to ownership of your country.
>>
>>5368525
A wig.
>>
>>5368506
Works for me, if we choose to we can bring up his resemblance away from all these courtiers.

Also do we have some purpose to this meeting beyond introductions? I figure we should ask about what Loch's plan is overall and how it includes Richter, even if we likely get no real answer.

WIZARD. BULLSHIT. They are all clones from Alexander or some nonsense.
>>
>>5368500
Supporting >>5368506
The sensible slouch
>>
>>5368500
>You recognize Henrik Von Zeissenburg, but no other titles. Helman the Silver Lance broke the Kaiser’s legions so that you would not bow here.
>>
>>5368506
>>5368509
>>5368525
>>5368538
>>5368601
>>5368649
>>5368688
A small courtesy. A recognition of greatness- but certainly not submission to superiority.
Does he not look familiar?

>>5368708
He is no god, and not your lord. He is but a man.

Writing.
>>
Respect was deserved of this man who had invited you, but certainly not of the groveling kind the head attendant seemed to expect. You favored the descendant of Alexander with a curt and short bow at the shoulders- maybe not as fancy as he or others might have expected, but you’d never been much of a social sort to know the particulars of court besides the minimum not to embarrass yourself. Oh well. Looking at the Kaiser’s expression and lack of reaction to your small movement, you guessed that he wasn’t fussy about manners himself, despite the sneer of his servants.

“Kaiser Henrik Von Zeissenburg,” you recognized the title, though not any dominion over yourself, “I am Major Richter Von Tracht, and Helman the Silver Lance was my ancestor. Pardon my frankness, but I feel as though I’ve met you before.”

A sly smile crept on the emperor’s cheeks. From one pretty boy to another, it was surprising he had no spouse, or even a rumor of one. “Perhaps.” He beckoned, “Come then, I’m certain you’ve many a question. You were invited for a reason, after all.” He motioned to the head attendant, “Marzan, could you tell the men outside to stand down? I’ll take care of Von Tracht from here.”

“Yes, my Kaiser.” A deep bow from him, and the other attendants, as you followed the head of state out and up the stairs.

“Pardon their attitude towards you,” the Kaiser said when you were upstairs, “Most of the Reich see men of the Archduchy as presumptuous and arrogant, ever unrightfully looking down upon others, and reflexively act expecting such. That offense is greater taken, combined with their love of me. I’m sure that you know how one can be angered more by a perceived slight to another than to oneself.”

“Have I caused offense?” you asked, genuinely not having intended any.

“Of course not,” the Kaiser said lightly, opening the door at the end of the entry hall, and progressing beyond, holding the door for you to pass ahead. The hall beyond was deep red below from carpet and tile both, with columns and arcs of fine black stone, chandeliers dotting the way down. All quite old looking- though you had little experience with artifacts and antiques. Perhaps Von Walen would be able to see so much more. “There is no need to wait with the questions I’m sure are most pressing.”
>>
“I can’t help but wonder why I was called here,” you said as you strayed from the center path and looked to a painting of a woman- who was side by side with a man who was clearly Kaiser Alexander. You saw some of Henrik in him- but they were not alike in expression whatsoever. Even in paint, Alexander had been given a stiffness and glint in the eye that showed, even at a young age, he was self-assured of greatness. The woman was apparently the first Kaiserin, a Dhegyar princess- evident from the heaviness of the eyelid and deep black hair, even if those traits seemed to have long vanished from Henrik’s blood- and the far western ancestry of the Dhegyar had already been muddled by time spent in the east by then, anyways. You realized that the Kaiser hadn’t answered you, and you glanced to him.

“Oh, I did not want to interrupt your thoughts,” the Kaiser nodded, “Alexander. There is much to say about him, much to ask. Most do not remember much of Alyzstacia, with Alexander so committed to conquest. Your question, though. Why you were called here.” Henrik walked past you, “To be quite honest, I expected you to come earlier. I wanted to extend my hand in comradeship, to ask for your loyalty and service, when it appeared that your homeland had cast you aside, and forgotten the respect your legacy ought to be owed. Though I’m afraid that, by now, you wouldn’t consider that offer, would you? Ha ha.”

“I don’t think I would, no.” Would you have considered even back then, despite everything?

“I can hardly blame you,” the Kaiser said, “It would have been much to ask, though I believe I would have given you a respectable opportunity at greatness, without the bite of unjust turning of coat.”

“There was another thing,” you said, “Loch.”

“Yes, Loch…” the Kaiser strode beyond you again, walking down the hall further, and neither of you stopped in stride. “What about Edmund Loch?”

“No, not him. The one who looks like you.” He must have known, and was playing coy. “He was the one who put your invitation into my hands after I surrendered it once. You won’t play at ignorance to that, will you?”

“I cannot answer every question, Von Tracht,” the coy lilt did not leave- there was a barrier here you would not be trusted across, at least, without a pledge of fealty, you bet. “Not to a man of Strossvald’s Intelligence Office. But if you see a man who looks quite like me, I have heard of a rumor I can share in polite conversation.” You reached the corner of the hall where it bent right, and marking it was a scarlet and gold painted suit of armor standing vigilant on a podium, a gilded longsword clutched in its gauntlets, held point-end down. You both stopped to observe it. “In the days when my father still reigned, his wife finally bore him two sons, after years of nothing. Twins. One was myself, his first born son."
>>
"In any other time," Henrik went on, "this would be cause for joy, yet in those days, he was wary of a crisis of succession, as Emrean War was being fought then, and the internal divisions that would lead to the troubled times after were already apparent. So it was fortunate that the other twin fell ill and died but a year later, leaving me the sole heir and future Kaiser. A throne I would be made to sit when I was but ten years old.” Kaiser Henrik’s crowning, in 1917, following Pieter II’s suicide. Henrik turned on his heel and proceeded down the hall further, and you followed as he finished his rumor. “It has been said that my long lost brother never died, and was instead abducted by Republicans and Utopians to fill his mind with dreams they wished to have shared by a man on the throne…but that is mere legend, as far as any can prove.”

“Legend, is it,” you echoed.

“I’m certain you know how many legends have both truth and falsehood in them,” the Kaiser smiled back at you, “They’re more fun when they can be told many ways.”

That a Kaiser might be instilled with liberal ideals wasn’t too far-fetched to you, especially with Maddalyn’s opinion of him that she had shared again when you told her of your arranged meeting with him. She had called Kaiser Henrik a “crypto-utopian,” though you recalled a less eloquent description- perhaps the passage of time and the density of life having obscured the year before.

Your walk took you to a passage that went out- a small raised garden space that stuck out the side of the palace, and presided at the end of a street that stretched out far into the city. There was no more than ten meters between the fence of the palace and the street, and though constables watched the perimeter, Imperial citizens walked freely quite close, as you were only a floor above.

“It might seem exposed,” the Kaiser said as he led you out to the edge, to the white stone carved fence, “But I enjoy looking at the people, the city. That is the Palace Market Street, reserved for those of lesser means to peddle their wares, to offer their services. Many a wealthier man has inquired about having a share of that street, and the numbers they speculate are enticing, but they do understand why I always turn them down. Some things are more important than maximizing the value of property, especially when the intent of that street is to allow any person to come close to their ruler. There is no barrier of wealth to see my person.”
>>
A pack of schoolchildren stopped and waved up at the both of you. The Kaiser held a hand up to recognize them, and you hesitantly waved too.

“It was not always this way,” Henrik said to you, as he continued to look out down the tiled roads that bore only a few carefully moving automobiles, most traffic being of foot or bicycle, a horse here and there. “For all his glory, Alexander was a man who believed his greatness meant that men far enough below him deserved little consideration, especially as he grew so great that few could compare to him. Your Archduchy, for all that Republicans today might snub it, was quite a liberal revolution for its time. Roland II and his allies realized the value of appealing to the people, while the Reich’s governate and its collaborators did not. A lesson the Great Reich took too long to learn on its own, and one that perhaps the Archduchy has had fade from some minds, or refuse to evolve. I cannot help but boast of what I have seen accomplished in my country, especially after the hopeless times that were my youth, but it is only respectful to recognize inspirations even long past.”

“I’ve heard you have a soft spot for the common folk,” you said, as you watched out over the city as well.

“Many in the place you come from would consider you just as common,” the Kaiser said.

He wasn’t incorrect. “So if your initial idea to have me join you is most certainly off the table, are we to just have tea, then?”

“If you like,” The Kaiser pointed to a table with chairs- covered platters and a magnificently engraved silver tea kettle with a few small porcelain containers and cups. “There are several sorts of tea and tisane, and sandwiches and finger food, nothing substantial. Though I did intend to take your measure further, and if you wanted to speak further, I would. After all,” the Kaiser smirked again, “I do not think it is unfair to assume that most would want to find out more about me. It’s hardly arrogance after a certain amount of deeds, is it.”

“It isn’t, is it,” you thought to what you’d managed to accomplish, to fail, to live through, as you wandered to the covered platters and uncovered one that hid stuffed cherry tomatoes, stuffed olives, and spiced cheeses, along with cheeses and vinegars.
>>
“Before any of your questions, though, I would have you answer one of mine,” the Kaiser said.

“That being?”

“Kaiser Alexander is reviled in your lands. Though, he had his own writings, his theory, and a dream. He saw a world divided, and made violent for those divisions, a humanity that was too cruel and greedy to be trusted with such motivation to destroy one another. So he intended his conquest to unite all peoples under one crown, one empire, and to destroy the differences between them. He was not a man of mercy or generosity, and history has taught us his follies. He tried to impose his vision upon the world, but he did believe that he was doing the right thing. Even if he did not see the beauty in the world that he tried to grind down into one culture. With that in mind, Von Tracht,”

The Kaiser still stood against the edge of the garden platform, a breeze blowing his cape about him, “You have surely had to make difficult decisions, regarding the lives of others. I won’t demand any proof from you. Yet if you were in Alexander’s place, finding great power, and possessed of the will and ability to use it…would you not try to change the world? Do you not have a dream that might be aided with such power, one worth the brutality and carnage that would be necessary to make it reality? Even if you are content with your place now, is there anything that you believe is justified by conquest in order to be born, in the ashen fields afterwards? After all, you yourself have sown change in some lands, and perhaps, for all who were lost, all who were hurt, you can claim it was for a good cause, that it was better in the end.”

>?
Also-
>Things to speak with Henrik about?
>Other?
>>
>>5368879
>Twins.
I don't believe it, sorcerer!
>…would you not try to change the world?
DESTROY ALL WIZARDS.

But I must pretend he doesn't know that. I don't think this iteration of Richter wants conquest, he wants to protect his family, comrades, country. He wants to earn honor and glory for his name and earn the respect Helman earned. Maybe someday he wants become the usurp Helman's position as the most prestigious Von Tracht?

How do you do that? Defeat a great evil, save a country/world, demonstrate incredible combat prowess, whatever. For both good reasons and bad ones I think he just wants to be the Big Damn Hero.

>Things to speak with Henrik about?
Fire it back at him. Maybe his Reich isn't like Alexanders, nor is his power absolute, but what will he do with it all, so early in his potentially long reign?

>Other?
Throw the salt at him, see if he melts.
>>
>>5368879
The only justified conquest is that which is done to liberate the people from tyranny or lawlessness. A good ruler rules to bring prosperity to his people, not to bring glory to himself or his ideals. If the quality of life of the people in other lands is poor enough then perhaps conquest is justified, as in Sosaldt. But to bring about death and destruction merely to impose your beliefs or ideals onto others reeks of arrogance. Perhaps there's an ideology out there that's truly so great as to be worth that cost, but if so we don't know of it.

>Things to speak with Henrik about?
Ask about what he sees in the future of relations between our two countries. Is conflict inevitable? Is there room for a warming of relations, maybe cooperation for our mutual benefit?

>>5368924
I believe the courtesy books generally agree that throwing salt at your host is to be considered a social faux pas.
>>
>>5368879
>is there anything that you believe is justified by conquest in order to be born, in the ashen fields afterwards?
The destruction of the flesh markets in Sosaldt and the prevention of the abuse of people in Ellowie and Netilland by the Military Government was worth it for I think. The pursuit of a better world is worth fighting for, but a perfect world may be too much for anyone. It may be better to fight for a good enough world, where the worst abuses of people are prevented, and the struggle for improvement can be done without a great war. We have seen the lasting damage a powerful man with noble intentions can cause after all, sorry to speak ill of the man in his own home but still.

>Things to speak with Henrik about?
Does Henrik have any friends? It helps a lot to fight in a tank for example with friends you can rely on, I can imagine its so much harder to run a country with people you only interact with professionally. He has got to have some people he trusts, that he can confide in and speak to candidly. I can't imagine even the greatest Kaiser being able to go it completely alone.
>>
>>5368879
>?
Richter believes in noblesse oblige, the idea that with elevated status comes an obligation to your lessers.
I'd think this mindset would lead to a sort of "With great power comes great responsibility" mindset...but on the other hand, I don't think Richter would ever...truly feel confident enough to risk mass immiseration of multiple groups of people for the sake of a dream.
He's too humble for that.
If there were great injustice somewhere, I feel like Richter would do his best to stop it, but to outright put it on himself to play global hero and fix the world?
Nah. I can't see him going that far.

>Things to speak with Henrik about?
"Where the fuck is your wife bro? I can't think of a reason why you wouldn't have a wife. Trust me, wives are bussin."
>>
>>5368879
>?
>if you were in Alexander’s place, finding great power, and possessed of the will and ability to use it…would you not try to change the world?
>one worth the brutality and carnage that would be necessary to make it reality?
Thinking back to the very beginning, from a clean slate, in the perspective of the last son of a faded house, fated to play the role of headsman for his own honour and endure the plunge from once heroic nobility to mediocrity, only to find the power and a chance to claw it all back again?
One could empathise with the temptation someone in that situation might find themselves under, to mould oneself a figurehead - an emperor - and rally a legendary war machine beneath them, to throw everything behind a shot at awakening a new world, even if it meant stripping back and burning away the beauty of the land to better salt those old roads to glory with the bones of the bold.
Might he see it as being better to gamble, to at least have tried, and even in failure, leave behind such a mark that those who come afterward toil forever to build your legacy a proper tomb grand enough that it might withstand all age, rather than to meekly accept his fate, to dig himself a grave and go quietly to the dirt?
Thankfully, Lady Fortune - as is her way - seemed keen to lift her skirts for us when it counted and has endeavoured to send our fate in a better direction, one where we've no use for such gambles on power and little desire to be caught in great, earthshattering acts of destiny. We don't have to change the world, we're content to let Dukes and Kaisers worry for such things. We would only use the power we've sought to protect what we already have.

>Things to speak with Henrik about?
"y'all ever seent a ghost?"

>Other?
Drink his tea. Richter must sample all the best teas the world has to offer. He must taste these highs so he can truly appreciate the lows.
>>
>>5368879
>Things to speak with Henrik about?
Talk a bit about Caelus spreading its influence in Vinstraga, from what I understand from our interactions with the Twayrians the Old Church really wasn't a fan of what Alex did to the faith here, even if new worlders are a bunch of heretics.
>>
>>5368879
Strength proves truth. As the old towering oaks must be chopped down to give way to the young saplings underneath, so too does the arborist pull out invasive flora and fauna to prevent the new buds from being strangulated. I would put to the sword all those around me who dare bring harm to my people.
If we can back our claim, circumstances matter not. I'm sure Alexander felt the same.
>>
>>5369015
+1

>>5369053
I like asking him about friends, maybe we can get some advice for Signy.

Wait a second... Signy saw some favor in Loch... this is his twin brother... what if... we hooked Signy up with the Kaiser?
>>
>>5369253
>what if... we hooked Signy up with the Kaiser?
We should take Strossvald... and push it somewhere else!
>>
>>5369259
lmao
>>
>>5369253
>>5369259
Her betrayal of the Revolution would be fully complete then.
>>
>>5368924
Conquest is not in your dreams. Heroism and glory is- wherever that is demanded.
Also- what is your Reich like?

>>5369015
>>5369253
The only just conquest is moral crusade to protect and serve- not a war waged of selfish ideals. Nothing is worth the cost that a terror might claim is for the common good, an immoral march.

Is war in our future? Could that not be so?

>>5369053
Better is worth it. The perfection seen in dream and delusion is not. We still feel the damage, continue to endure, the costs of those.

Do you have friends? You must, surely.

>>5369080
You are not so arrogant as to presume to save the world from itself. You know what is right, and will fight for it, but will not declare a moral truth to impose.

Martial might and political strength are good, but have you tried pussy?

>>5369110
Once, perhaps. When glory was so short, when one's place in the world was less certain. Now, though? The world needs no new Alexander to rise from a small realm. What you have is quite enough.

Talk about spooky things, and take all the sips you can.

>>5369228
The only truth is strength, but my strength is reserved for those who bring their blade to me first.

>>5369146
So how about those weird far east people, huh?

Writing. I think we've got a general philosophy put together here from all this.

>>5369253
>>5369334
Signy was fond of Loch at first.
Now she's had quite enough of him. Her type is probably better off found elsewhere. The difference between finding somebody physically attractive and finding the whole of their character attractive, and all.
>>
“Hm.” You put your false fingers to your chin and crossed an arm under your elbow, eyes searching for the tea essentials as you thought about that question. For the longest time, you’d had practically nothing. The you of but two years past was utterly unrecognizable compared to what you were now. Perhaps that younger man would have a different answer. An untested and burning ambition, perhaps akin to what Alexander may have had before he became Kaiser. A need to be greater, far greater, than what you were. For the power, experiences, and influence you had now, you very well could compare your two stages of life to Alexander’s humble beginnings as Prince of a city state, to the conqueror of a continent.

A proverb some exchanged sagely was that it was unwise to compare oneself to Alexander too closely. Yet for this question, you had to. When Alexander was on the brink of ultimate victory over the last vestiges of the east of Vinstraga, he reached the mountains around Naukland…and then died. Did he ponder what you did now, whether he truly wanted to finish this work he had engineered? Did he doubt if he wished to see its final terrible fruits? Or had it merely been fortunate coincidence for Naukland? His choice at the last great mountains that had been his barrier had been certainly to go forth and conquer.

The answer for you though, now that it was time to consider crossing the Imperial Gate to begin the great conquest, if only in imagination, was to turn your back.

It all seemed too far beyond you. What you wanted, what you might want to overturn or destroy. Individual injustices, maybe even those of groups, forces, foes you could righteously battle with and defeat, but the world? Entire nations, both their belligerents and the innocents? What ideal could you think of that was worth the suffering of war that would bring upon everybody, for naught but a chance at an imagined perfection?

You picked out a tea labeled as a Dhegyar blend as you thought, hearing Zeissenburg flow in the wind around you. A smoky, spicy sort, it described itself- a sharp bite on the tongue to wake up the senses. As it brewed in the cup with hot water, and you momentarily distracted yourself over the question of sugar, you landed upon an important note in your answer- what did you want that might be so grand as reforming the world? Be honest with yourself.

There was no glory for you in conquest, you thought as you watched the water of the tea turn darker, a deep black that became ruby red around the edges. In defeating conquest, in being a hero, a savior, a champion, that was what you wanted to define as your legacy in battle. There were evils you had had a hand in vanquishing, and you carried no regrets for them. The thought of trying to uncover and mold a new world by planting one atop the ashes of the old, no matter how beautiful the one after might be…that sparked no wonder in you, nor anything but distaste.
>>
The cup was picked up and you returned to the Kaiser.

“The Dhegyar Blood Tea, hm?” the Kaiser noted, “There’s no blood in it, of course. The color is reminiscent of their black broth. It’s said that the only proper way to drink it is with a strand of hair from a Dhegyar woman, but, that particular tradition is not present in that brew.” He gestured a hand to the city, “An odd people to speak of the history of, with how many are here now. Once a warlike confederation of horse riding tribesmen, born in the saddle and raised to war, and now, they have lived so long and peacefully that differentiating them from anybody else here can be difficult, save for the blackness of hair and the slight weight to the eye. Though they are certainly still proud enough of their martial past to make up a greater portion of men in the armed forces.”

“Yet the Yaegir are as fierce as ever,” you said, “I’ve thought of an answer to your question of just conquest, Henrik Von Zeissenburg.”

“Yes?”

A shake of your head. “I can’t think of any sort of change I’d want to force upon the world, if I had the power to do so. It isn’t my idea of glory, my idea of helping the world. I’ve thrown dice for fate more than a few times, and I’m not willing to cast them for the fate of the world. This continent has its problems, but they need not be solved by an all-destroying army. I am plenty content fighting evil one villain at a time, and only those enemies, rather than the very foundations of nations and people themselves. I could never justify to myself what Alexander did, for any reason. I could only use my strength, however great, for causes I could call virtuous, not for any vain idea of creating a perfect world.”

The Kaiser smiled at you, vaguely. “Many a Utopian would take affront at a sentiment, claiming that upholding the order of the world prolongs suffering, that the only just cause is to further the Revolution at any cost.”

“Are you a utopian?”

Henrik cocked his head and sniffed a small laugh. “Ha. No, I’m afraid not. As you said, the idea of burning down the world so that a better one may rise up does not sit well with me. I was instructed by men like Edmund Loch, commiserated with the liked of Sigmund Vang, and most would not hesitate to point out their utopian sympathies, but they did define themselves as Republicans. They felt sympathy for those who would have to bear the burden of suffering for Utopian aspirations. Saw a simple virtue in the differences that define us, no matter our wealth or power. I spent some years poor as part of their training to expand my perspective, Von Tracht. At first it might seem like agony to those accustomed to having all they could ask for, but there is a pride in humble day to day survival, no shame in the sweat of one’s brow earning no glory. Not when you know that there is a purpose that you labor for. A future.”
>>
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“That is the Reich of Henrik, then?” you asked, “I heard you were not like Alexander. If I asked you the question about conquest, you would not burn the world, either?”

“Those without a future are tempted by that,” Henrik rested his hand on the stone fencing, “They are willing to brighten the darkness of their lives with any flame, no matter the fuel. Desperation breeds desperation, however, and my vision for the future is one where as many can be happy as possible, no matter who they are. Where tomorrow is not clouded by doubt. Where the people can, in their moments of despair, merely look upwards,” he swept his arm to the city, “And see the Kaiser watching them, reaching a hand for them to take if only they summon the strength to climb upwards. A guardian sworn to their prosperity, and have faith that they can always bring themselves back up no matter how deep they think they fall. Though, I cannot be that to the world. At least, not yet. When that time comes, then I invite it, but for now, the men and women of the Reich look to me, and I am honored by their faith. A better world is plenty attainable at a slow pace. History is not defined by individual lifetimes, after all, but by many, working after each other.”

Many lifetimes, working after each other. A legacy towards tomorrow. Though…not yet, echoed in your mind. “Though the armies of the Reich are known for conquest. Nations live in fear of the second coming of Alexander.”

“That fear protects us, as much as it curses,” the Kaiser said, without a hint of offense, “Have you heard of the saying, Richter? Si vis pacem, para bellum?”

“I doubt you would find a soldier who hasn’t.”

“Times are uncertain, Von Tracht,” the Kaiser said, “Words are but wind without the backing of a blade. A peaceful world is not one without guns, without tanks, or aircraft, or battleships. A peaceful world is one where all of those stand vigilant. An untested blade grows dull. Provocations unmet escalate. There are times when a swift war will prevent a greater one. Faelinn and Felbach are occupied protectorates, yes, but they are far from ruled as though under Alexander. It was necessary for the Reich, by mine and the measures of others, including the representatives of the people in the Parliament. I shan’t defend the shedding of blood, but difficult decisions must be made for those in your care when inaction would lead to their misfortune, do you agree?”

You frowned and bit your lip- but could hardly disagree.

“I appreciate your answer, however,” the Reich moved to fetch his own tea, “When the world cloisters itself away at your approach, the isolation may lead to flaws in perspective. It is good to listen even to those who may hate you.”
>>
That brought a question to mind, as you finally sipped your tea. It was like placing a coal on your tongue at first, then, a bright, tingling spice, as the tea spread over the mouth. “Do you see peace between our nations in the future? An end to the rivalry between the Archduchy and the Grossreich?”

“Logically, there could be. The arrival of a day where the Imperial Gate has no minefields, no bunkers, but is merely the artery for trade and travel,” the Kaiser said to you as he held a steaming teacup between his fingers, “I’m sure that such a future would make most happy. A few stand to lose from such, though. The Archduchy is a bellicose nation, Von Tracht. Some feel they have more to gain from keeping the Reich far and at the end of a gun, and look eastward for cooperation. Some still feel the fear of their ancestors, and I can hardly blame them. I doubt there will be cooperation, any end to rivalries, but,” the Kaiser sipped at the tea, “We can hope for there to not be war, hm?”

You wondered just how genuine he was with those feelings. Though lying to you held little purpose. “With only the two of us here,” you said, “I have to ask. Do you have friends to have tea with? I am a tanker, and a tank cannot function without a crew of comrades. Of friends, to share in hardship and victory with. I can only imagine a nation must also require friends.”

The Kaiser laughed at that. “Ha ha, yes, Von Tracht, of course I have friends. Both humble and in high places. My mentors past and present. Comrades in arms. Members of the Parliament, the common folk. I may not see Brecht who works at the steelworks every day, but the one day where I met him at an ice cream parlor and spoke with him about his joys and woes, I remember as much as I hope as he. There are a few foreign friends, like that of the queen of Halmeggia Edelina Von Halm-Auric. That woman does need the comfort of friends,” the Kaiser sighed, “She has had an unfortunate turn of events in life. She was ever optimistic, kind, believing the best of man, but her faith made her naïve. Now most of her family lies dead, and since the Civil War, she has not returned to the country that she is the monarch of. A crown that lays heavy on her head for how it found its way there.”

You’d heard that name. “Von Halm-Auric.” Yes, the first part of the name, but beyond that. “I’ve heard that family has golden eyes.”

“They do. Quite literally. If you planned on staying longer, I would offer that you meet Edelina,” the Kaiser picked up a fig finger sandwich, sorting through tea snacks. “To describe it is to fail the image. They are not golden brown, not yellow. The house of Halm-Auric has truly golden eyes. They shimmer and sparkling like the true noble metal. They are the most beauteous eyes of any human, and they alone bear them.”
>>
You finished the biting, warming Dhegyar tea, and after a sigh of satisfaction, you asked, “You are a bachelor, I’ve heard. Why? Perhaps I am biased, but to have a wife is something I’m very happy about.”

“Hm hm, ha ha,” the Kaiser covered his mouth in amusement, “Did I sound so fond of the Queen? I’ve considered it, Von Tracht, but it is not so easy as merely wanting. Your marriage was arranged. I must decide mine based off of what would be best for the Reich, for the people, not on what I would prefer. That is the truth of having so much power. The decisions required of you may not be the ones you would favor. I keep my avenues for marriage open, because it engenders compliance from the nobility in the protectorates. They’re given hope and deterred from dissent by a chance at reaching higher. Many hope to give over their daughters, their cousins, their sisters over to find an alliance in Zeissenburg. Some believe it would be prudent to marry Edelina, and meld Halmeggia into the Reich. Others even go so far as to suggest a marriage to Strossvald, in their wildest speculations. However it goes in the future, for now, it is extremely important that I have no woman’s hand in union.”

“I see.” It was true that Maddalyn and your marriage had been arranged, yet…it wouldn’t have been very important who you ended up marrying, so long as your house survived and grew. It wasn’t impossible to think of a non-noble wife, were Maddalyn not part of your life. There was a freedom there that you’d never really appreciated. “Which tea are you having now?” You’d sample what you could while you were here. The Kaiser being an appreciator of tea was a true blessing.

“This?” the Kaiser swirled his cup, “It is called Meadow Tea, a tisane from Emre, particularly, from Couronne Arc-En-Ciel. The city of morning’s jewels takes pride in this concoction of berries, pine, mint and citrus. It is quite sweet, bright as daylight in dew.”

Good enough for you. A greedy new cup was seized, as you thought of a new question. “All these foreign teas make me think of the foreigners back east,” you said, “When I was in Ellowie, I contended with Twaryians. Was made aware of their spread, the expanding influence of Caelus. I heard rumors in Mittelsosalia that Caelus is considered the greatest threat to the continent, through Twaryi. What do you think of that?”

“Mm,” the Kaiser seemed nonplussed and he sat down along with you as you took a seat, “The Twaryians and Caelus are far from the Reich. When the maelstrom clears away, Zhantao is even somewhat closer, and them between us and Caelus from that way. You would find few in the Reich wary of the Caelussian Federation, save for the make of some of the products they trade in our ports.”
>>
“The most concerned seem to imply their power is incredible, not to be underestimated,” you said, “I’ve heard the Old Church is not particularly fond of how Alexander purged the Cathedra from his conquests, even if the Cathedra are also considered a sort of heretic.”

“You know of followers of the Old Church?”

“A couple.” One, really. The other one you had known of had gotten her brains blown out all over the inside of her tank, judging from the look of her ghost in that one dream. For your sake, whether she knew it or not. “Though the Twaryians seem more hardline than Caelussians.”

“Interesting. Though as I have said, the Reich is little concerned with them. There are many countries, many mountains, much sea, between us and them. When we have plenty to concern ourselves on this side of the continent,” the Kaiser lightly turned his teacup over his lip in a pause, “No matter how large this other rival, they are so far over the horizon that they cannot be seen, and thus considered.”

“Though the distress they cause the people you can see must be of note,” you said.

“Indeed it is,” the Kaiser mused, “They are also so far that, while we are heretics to them, they do not bear the terror of Alexander that the rest of this continent does. There are many ways the future may go, depending upon who is friendlier.”

…Ah. That sounded…foreboding. Though surely, anybody in charge of political affairs would have seen this so plainly…

“You needn’t drink quickly, Von Tracht,” the Kaiser said lightly, “If you wish, you can take that entire box of teas.”

That statement wasn’t taken at complete face value. You left behind one of each sort- you weren’t that discourteous of a guest.

What else, what else… “This might seem strange, but…have you seen any ghosts?” You asked.

There was an odd, knowing glint in Henrik’s eye. “The ghosts of the past make themselves noisy in many ways, Von Tracht. Some of them insist on lingering for quite some time.”

“Is that a yes?”

“You’d have to be more specific,” the Kaiser said, looking for something in your eyes, “Hmm…do you mean hauntings of folk tales, or do you refer to…the Presence?”

>Yes. The Presence. He clearly already knew about it.
>Folk tales. What’s the Presence?
>Other?
Also-
>Talk of anything else with the Kaiser?
>Anything else to do in Zeissenburg while you’re here?
>Time to adjourn your meeting. You had another flight to catch.
And-
>Anybody else you want to peek in on? After all, it’ll be a while before they’re seen again…
>>
>>5369613
>Yes. The Presence. He clearly already knew about it.
And what is the *deal* with soulbinders these days, am I right?
>>
>>5369613
I swear our loose lips about magic is going to be the death of us. Interesting that the Kaiser knows about spoiky business, byt as always, the less we let on and the less we actually know, the better.
>Folk tales. What’s the Presence?

>Anything else to do in Zeissenburg while you’re here?
The major wanted us to keep our eyes open right? See if we can’t gain any insight about the Reich here. Maybe look at the tanks outside a bit more closely, perhaps spare an eye for the rifkes carried by the guards. Subtly of course. Maybe check the tanks for numbers on the side for some smart people back home to make an educated guess on force numbers in the capital. Probably other things to notice that I’m missing.

Also, take Maddy up to a high point, tower, top of a building or something so she can have a sort of view of the city. Maybe we can ask the Kaiser or corvacs if they know of such a place.

>Anybody else you want to peek in on? After all, it’ll be a while before they’re seen again…
I assume this is for perspective shift? I wonder how king Wyladysaw is doing, or if anything significant has happened by now.
>>
>>5369613
>>Yes. The Presence. He clearly already knew about it.
>>
>>5369613
>Yes. The Presence. He clearly already knew about it.

>Talk of anything else with the Kaiser?

Out of curiosity, would he have any advice for someone similarly thrust into a situation much like his at the beginning of his reign? Mainly thinking about the situation with the Archduke's grandson

>Anybody else you want to peek in on? After all, it’ll be a while before they’re seen again…

An Ellowian one would be nice, depending on if you have any particular inspiration atm. Wladyslaw would be interesting from the political point of view, or a short epilogue for Wrath Leader. I wonder if Wielzci managed to find his wife? It'd be nice to see firsthand some of the positive things occurring from decisions Richter made during the tour much like Mittlesosalia.
>>
>>5369613
>Yes. The Presence. He clearly already knew about it.
>Talk of anything else with the Kaiser?
Would a non-agression pact be a good start or even possible?
Has he thought about a certain minister of the people and her nation.
You're actually the second head of state I'm on speaking terms with. The king of Elowie even gave me this mask as a gift.
>Anything else to do in Zeissenburg while you’re here?
See the city for itself and walk amongst the people. maybe even get some ice cream.
>Anybody else you want to peek in on? After all, it’ll be a while before they’re seen again…
All the Reich men we saw in Mittelsosalia
>>
>>5369788
>second head of state I'm on speaking terms with.
Third
>>
>>5369799
Oh shit, that's true. Forgot Vang...
>>
>>5369613
>Yes. The Presence. He clearly already knew about it.

>Talk of anything else with the Kaiser?
I like >>5369751's idea here. Would opening a dialogue with the Archduke's most probable successor even be possible for Henrik? Could hope for mending the two nations' relations begin there?

>Anything else to do in Zeissenburg while you’re here?
See if we can locate the artificer Zierke spoke of long ago and have him look over Richter's prosthetic, or at least get an address to write to him at, in future. Damn it I want a cool gun hand too, or I suppose, failing that, maybe something more tactile, like a vibrating finger.

>Anybody else you want to peek in on? After all, it’ll be a while before they’re seen again…
Assuming this means a perspective shift... Uh. Does the shift necessarily have to be to current events? Could we see what became of fat duck Martin, the Emrean soldier, 20 odd years ago? If not, switch to Magnus and his very important business back home.
If this isn't a prompt for a perspective shift after all and it means Richter literally goes out and finds people, then you already know what we have to do. We need to meet the infamous "Wolf Tamer" face to face, while we have the chance.

>>5369610
Stupid sexy Henrik
>>
>>5369698
>>5369746
>>5369751
>>5369788
>>5369873
Onward with the spook,

>>5369741
Hold off on spook.

>>5369741
>>5369788
Stay in the Imperial Capital a bit. Keep eyes open. Take Maddalyn to the top of a tower So you can chuck her off of it

>>5369751
>>5369873
Talk of young rulers.

>>5369788
Talk of other rulers.

>>5369873
Look for the hand crafter. Be extremely careful with what fingers you stick where.

I'm taking a break for today, so I'm not calling anything until tomorrow, though things are pretty well decided. I just don't want to potentially cut anybody off from adding anything.

>>5369741
>I assume this is for perspective shift?
Of sorts- but only a brief one. A look at what's going on rather than actions to vote on. Nothing too extended as to not get in the way of wrapping up the arc in time.

So, thus far, we've got Wladysaw, some other Ellowians, Griffon Company and its associates...
>>5369873
>Could we see what became of fat duck Martin, the Emrean soldier, 20 odd years ago?
You already know what happened to him.
>If not, switch to Magnus and his very important business back home.
No Magnus, sorry. There are some things I think are better kept off screen if they're relevant for potential discovery later on.
>>
>>5370019
Throw him the question Maddy asked about our children's greatness, see what his answer would be.
>>
>>5369610
>the Reich moved to fetch his own tea
Henrik IS the senate.
>>
A pursing of your lips. How much did the leader of the Reich know, and how much did he suspect, to speak of it so flippantly? Perhaps your answer would surprise him. Perhaps it was arrogant, but bending to the will of sorcerers whenever they appeared was irritating. “Yes. The Presence.” What use was there hiding from it?

“Interesting phenomena. Yet its secrets are so difficult to find, practically hidden, yet that only makes it so much more alluring to discover the slightest crumbs.” Henrik said this as he lifted another covering for a tray of sweet pastries, fried dough in honey, figs and pickled plums. “You’d assume anybody in power would know of something so influential, but no. The only people who might know more, the shifty secret keepers of the mountains, leave well enough alone those who do not stray, and play at ignorance when questioned, with those too persistent vanishing. It was by pure fortune that the world of spirits came to my awareness…and, once upon a time, I was greatly frustrated that to reach for it may invite danger. All I could do is speculate and study, philosophize, with what few treasures managed to find their way to me.”

“I’ve elected to keep my distance except when necessary,” you said, “There’s a few who would call such knowledge forbidden.” Though it was admittedly incredibly potent- and without the influence of dabbling in arts meant to be kept from you and the world, you may not even have been sitting there, speaking to the Kaiser. “Especially when some are intent on keeping those secrets buried wherever they are, undisturbed.”

“Most certainly. Though when one looks about for spirits and specters, they also see the cycles of life, the energies of the world. The temptation is hard to resist- but indeed, the secret keepers have the right of it. Best that most stay ignorant, and those who know keep to themselves about it.” He picked out a rolled pastry that appeared to have chocolate swirled in its center. “The world beyond is so vast, but better not seen. Our world is plenty grand enough as is. Though admittedly, it is pleasant to give it a minute or so of discussion.”

You’d agree- yet Maddalyn insisted on dabbling, herself, and you knew she could not be convinced to do anything more than to be careful. “It’s freeing. But I still feel like whenever I talk of it to anybody but a select few, there are ears in the shadows, listening.”

“None of those here. But I understand.” There was a relief in Henrik’s voice- he might have been disappointed if you hadn’t shared, like he already knew, just judging from how you reacted to his query in the first place.

“Getting back to our world, as you put it,” glancing all around just to reassure yourself, “You found yourself on the throne at a very young age. What would you recommend to those who might share that experience?”
>>
The Kaiser frowned, thought. “You are thinking that your Prince Alden Von Strossvald will have that experience. Strossvald is not my country, and Von Strossvald not my house. I was merely ten years old, but I had a gathering of men who were completely invested in my development. Who saw potential in me, and worked to bring it out, who protected me from those who would use my youth to puppet me. If your prince does not have such people surrounding him, I’m afraid no amount of advice from myself could save him. All that aided me that might him, is asserting capability as quickly as possible. It took me three more years to make my first shaky steps. Another three to find that I could make effective decisions, two more before I became competent at those. It takes time and harsh lessons to mature, and without a trusted circle of friends and mentors, very, very few young rulers may have those opportunities to mature.”

That pessimism infected you. Who would protect the young prince if the Archduke died too early? Already, you had heard of controversy with the Capital cabals seeming to decide matters apart from the Archduke, as the highest office of Strossvald had become idle in his duties…Alden was not ten years old. He was six. Depending on how sternly the Judge’s glare landed upon your nation, he would not even have the same chances as Henrik’s great fortune. What is there to do but pray for Archduke Siegfried’s health and mind?

“Then you understand why it’d be nice to have better relations with your country,” you vastly understated the concern. “Would even a simple and symbolic declaration not help matters? A pact of neutrality?”

“Such matters are written and enacted by Parliament, Von Tracht,” the Kaiser explained to you, “And I am loathe to act forcefully against that interest when we are on such pleasant terms. Perhaps if you spread such a message back in your home and they came forward, then there might be better progress. My people are proud, and not ones to grovel towards those who look down on them.”

It had been worth a try. You doubted you could change many hearts back in Strossvald, either.

“Strossvald has a new neighbor,” you said, “Certainly of interest and concern both.”

“Almizea?”

“Eh?” You blinked, “No, I was referring to Mittelsosalia. What do you think of that, and is leader? Another young head of state, and a woman, at that…I know you think something of it. Your men and armor, your best pilots, were among those who fought alongside them as of late.”
>>
The Kaiser, having finished his first cup, picked out another tea. “Even Alexander could not conquer the wastes. He had no plan for them, despite their potential. I recognize what might come, hence the support. Though you wouldn’t believe it to be merely charity, would you? I prefer to keep some of myself close to the chest, though, as I’ve inferred to you. I believe Sigmund would be proud of his daughter. She has endured much and remained in power. I know some people take joy in watching her flower into her place, whether it is destiny, or a happy happenstance.”

Yet she wouldn’t be where she was now, you thought silently, if men of the Reich had not attacked her, killed her father. Was that unplanned? Was that the work of an Imperial Rival, in spite of how the Kaiser claimed to be loved? He did mention he had his enemies. Those were questions that you’d be given no answer to, though.

“Nauk Mushroom Tea,” Henrik said to you unprompted, “A poor blend tastes like dirt and damp leaves. A good one like this brings flavors of earth and peat. Similar sounding material, but the seemingly small difference is everything. The addition of a particular sort of fungus adds an aftertaste of slight sweetness, and herbs such as sage elevate it above the plainer blends…better with a small dash of cream.”

“Selected for the subject, I take it.”

The Kaiser’s smile had not diminished. “Perhaps.”

The Kaiser and Signy were both single, you thought. If they married…the Archduchy would surely be apoplectic. It seemed a thin possibility, though, given that her fondness had been for Loch, and she seemed fond no longer. It would not spell good things for the Republic, and frankly, you had a fondness for that hole in the wastes. You’d told Signy you’d come to her aid if you could, too- and couldn’t think of raising arms against that state after saying such a thing, and being trusted of your words.

“You haven’t asked about my mask,” you said- you’d gotten used to it enough now that you forgot it was there sometimes, save for when it was bumped. “You’re actually the third head of state I’ve been on speaking terms with. I was given this as a gift by King Wladysaw XI of Ellowie.”

“I’ve heard of the Kommandant with and without his new mask,” the Kaiser said, dipping the teabag in and out, before placing in the cream dab he had recommended, “I did not want to speak of it if you didn’t. It’s uncertain which face you prefer, if you pardon my saying.”

You touched at your mask- heard the slight, hollow resonance of the wooden work of art as a steel finger rang against it so softly. “I wear it for people who might be shocked or put off by my wounds. The people I don’t wear it around…the Silver Lances don’t like new members hiding things about themselves, and my retinue says she likes how my face looks.”

“What about your wife?”
>>
It was a genuine question, but you reflexively tensed anyways, having spoken of Anya first. That, and Maddalyn’s opinion of your face was…not very relevant. She could not see it, but she did touch it… “She prefers me without my mask as well.”

“Well then,” the Kaiser raised a hand, “Show me, then. I am no stranger to the cruelties of war and battle. I won’t recoil.” The mask came off, and true to his word the Kaiser did not grimace or gasp. “Flayer, was it? Yet only over your face.”

“Somebody really hated me.” He hadn’t been incorrect to, even if he listened to no apologies, only concessions of pain. You took off your glove from your right hand and flexed your artificial fingers, “He took these right before. The man isn’t among the living anymore.” The false fingers clicked as they responded you the variable clenching of your hand, “Zierke told me that the artificer who made his arm also made these fingers.”

“An eccentric man,” the Kaiser said, “Difficult to reach and particular about his services. He does not live in Zeissenburg, else I would try to employ his services at a constant rate.”

“Where does he live?”

“In the Emmerach. A border protectorate with little patience for outsiders, as its own people are such to both the Reich and its neighbors, in a way. I’m afraid you wouldn’t be able to enter there even with my say-so. Whomever you received those fingers from would know better how to find your way to Sillbus the Sculptor.”

A look at the base of the finger showed you his signature- a looping S that curled into itself like a circle, the left half contained within a half moon shape.

“I’ve one more question for you, as to not spend too many hours of your time.” The Kaiser spread his hands to your question, expectant. “My wife asked me this recently. Children are on the mind, of course, but considering the lineage of a nation’s leader must be of incredible importance, especially how they’ll continue the legacy, what would your idea of your descendants being great be?”

“Ah-h-h, quite far into the future,” the Kaiser stroked his chin, looking amused, but it was not so easy for him to answer. You snatched up a few snacks while you waited for him as he had for you. “To be true, Von Tracht, I am rather hoping my bloodline’s great work is finished by the time I am old. Generations have culminated with me, and I hope that my descendants will be able to live in a bright future, content that the hard work for their era is done, and that they feel no need to surpass me, as I would not leave anything undone for them to finish. In other words, I would rather that they not have to be great…though that is selfish, isn’t it? I’ve no clear answer, but there is no hurry for me to decide. Not with my intentions on what to complete.”
>>
That need for freedom for the ancestors…though you saw it now from a place of a man who felt he had so much more to do, while you felt content with the heights you reached.

Was that the difference between normal men and the truly great? Or the other way around?

You stood and made the stiff, slight bow of the shoulders you had greeted the Kaiser with. “Thank you for your hospitality. Now, though, I believe we are finished. I don’t want to keep my Maddalyn waiting too long.”

“Does she think you may have run off with me?” The Kaiser said in a coy lilt that caught you off guard. Rather more like Loch than he might admit.

“I’ve spent much time away with her. I have to make it all up.” Maddalyn might actually think you had, if appraisals like hers of Anya extended beyond your retinue.

“Of course. I understand. After all the effort you’ve put in?”

“Also,” you said, “I am permitted to tour the city, yes? I thought of taking her around to see the sights.”

“Far be it from I to bar Strossvalders from gazing upon the seat of the Empire, though as a courteous gesture,” the Kaiser winked slowly, “I would not try anything sneaky. If you believe you have not had a trail since the moment you crossed over the Gates…then I am hurt by your underestimation of me.”

“I would have expected no less.”

-----

Covacs was waiting to take you back, though he curtly rejected anything more than returning you to whence you came, from the bathhouse.

“I’m not your chauffer,” he said to the proposal.

“Fine,” you sniffed, “While I have you, though…where is your comrade? The Wolf Tamer, with the scar on his face? Last we met, I hadn’t much opportunity to talk…”

“Hell if I know.”

“You don’t know where your commanding officer is?”

The pride of professionalism was stronger than wanting you out of his hair. “I know where he is. He’s at the airfield. Got an exception to this ceremony, because he wanted to stay around Linda Von Falkenstein. They’re childhood friends, or something like that. Probably won’t be there all day, so if you want to catch them, you ought to find them fast. Going drinking with Roth-Vogel is a bad idea, so I try to keep out of it.”

Else he might be dragged into brawling tournaments to have the snot beaten out of him, evidently. “Thank you anyways.”

“Don’t mention it.”

A suggestion you followed all the way until you were dropped off. In the warmly lit, tiled entrance hall to the bathhouse, Maddalyn waited, seated on the edge of a recliner while her guards stood vigilant, saluting as you entered.
>>
“You’re back,” Maddalyn stood up and brushed the skirt and sleeves of her yellow-buttercream dress down, “Good. We can be quit of this place.”

“Actually,” you said as you came up next to her, “You wouldn’t mind staying some, would you? How often does one get to go on a date in Zeissenburg?”

Maddalyn’s expression softened, and she brushed a finger through her hair. “I suppose it wouldn’t hurt…where do you want to go?

>A tall place, to look down from. There was an exquisitely sculpted sandstone tower, tiled with green, that was open to the public- Pieter II’s Garden, or so it was called, though it had only been completed recently…
>Before anything…you wanted to return to the baths. With her, this time.
>To the airfield- not to fly away, but to meet somebody interesting…
>Other?

As you thought of your answer, Maddalyn asked you a question right after.

“The Kaiser,” she said as she beckoned you come closer, “How was your meeting with him? What was your measure of him?” She had a sharpness in her eyes- she already had an opinion, and wanted to see how yours compared, now that you were enlightened…

>An enigma. He acted friendly- but didn’t expose himself. Perhaps his affable sociality belied a dangerous man…or perhaps that was merely paranoia.
>The Kaiser was an unexpectedly good man. If you weren’t rivals through loyalties to nations, you could see yourself even being friends. Perhaps he had a vision for a brighter future that he shouldn’t be doubted for?
>An enemy for certain. No matter how kind and generous he was, no matter how good a man, he was still a conqueror, and more dangerous for his good traits.
>Other?
>>
>>5370976
>A tall place, to look down from. There was an exquisitely sculpted sandstone tower, tiled with green, that was open to the public- Pieter II’s Garden, or so it was called, though it had only been completed recently…
We want her to be able to see the city from the air obligatory short joke.

>Other?
Not an enemy, but still someone to be wary of. Not quite be afraid of yet, but a man of vision of means, both of a terrifying scope. He's someone very aware of the mistakes of the past, and even the mistakes of the present, but he can't truly be called a Utopian or even a Republican. Yes, an enigma, but his friendliness didn't seem like a veneer, he isn't actively dangerous like many of the people we've opposed or helped along the way, but he has the capacity to do worse than any of them, even in the name of good.
>>
>>5370976
>A tall place, to look down from. There was an exquisitely sculpted sandstone tower, tiled with green, that was open to the public- Pieter II’s Garden, or so it was called, though it had only been completed recently…

As for talking about the Kaiser, let's be careful what we say here, we just got told we have a tail. No harm in saving it for later.
>The Kaiser is a complicated topic, and we're on our honeymoon. Let's save him for later, shall we?
>>
>>5371014
+1
>>
>>5370976
>To the airfield- not to fly away, but to meet somebody interesting…
Not sure a public bath would relax Maddy as much as it might put her more on edge, considering Anya's midge dunking antics last time she used one.
Let's go find Rein and shake his hand so we can watch the two questlines cross and implode.
>>5371014 has a very nice answer to the second question, supporting.
>>
>>5370976
A tall place, to look down from. There was an exquisitely sculpted sandstone tower, tiled with green, that was open to the public- Pieter II’s Garden, or so it was called, though it had only been completed recently…
Maddalyn liked the Gardens at her place, she outta like them here too.

>>5371014
This guys sums up the feelings on the man. Dangerous not because of what or who he is now, but what he could become.
The intimidating aura of a ambitious young man of power.
>>
>>5370976
>>To the airfield- not to fly away, but to meet somebody interesting…
Reinholds is a major now too right? They practically have to meet at this point.

>An enigma. He acted friendly- but didn’t expose himself. Perhaps his affable sociality belied a dangerous man…or perhaps that was merely paranoia.
He would be better to have as a friend than an enemy to be sure, especially if that would prevent the Reich from coming knocking if Caelus starts making beachheads somewhere uncomfortably close.
>>
>>5371014
>>5371054
>>5371093
>>5371395
You drew the short straw, now take it up high.

>>5371242
>>5371675
Crossing the streams.

General Kaiser feelings seem clear.

Writing. Don't know if I'll have it done before I have to go, but if not, I hope that smaller choices in between aren't too bad to do.
>>
A picture of the Kaiser’s character, free from the influence of being near and him being so cordial, weighing his statements of belief politically rather than it being a friendly tea chat, was forming. Yet you were wary of what might be heard. “I’ll tell you when we’re somewhere else,” you told Maddalyn, then said to both her as well as yours and her guards, quietly, “I’ve been informed that we have an observer assigned to watch us. We can hardly help being tailed in a foreign country, but I wanted you to be aware.”

“Hm. We’ll be sure to keep an eye out for anything more than a persistent watch,” the Sergeant saluted. He was a loyal man- one who had earned the mutual trust of Bastian through him doing the common soldier a seemingly small favor that had greatly reversed his poor fortunes. He had been a guardsman of the Von Blums for years since.

“We’ve naught to hide,” Maddalyn declared, though her eyes narrowed past you, looking at whoever else was attendant and identifying them, presumably. Disguises did not work on her- she couldn’t even perceive them.

“Even so. Just so nobody might rudely interrupt us, as we tour the city for a while. I’d like to visit one of those high buildings, so we can have a view from up high.”

“That sounds lovely,” Maddalyn said, “Sergeant, do we have an acceptable amount of coin to dine with?”

“We do, my lady,” the broad chested sergeant bowed, as did his partner, a slimmer and shorter man, but a junior of a guardsman was still a capable combatant. “I was not informed of the prices of goods here, however.”

“It will be irrelevant,” Maddalyn said.

In a less haughty assumption, you said after, “I doubt we’ll be sitting down anywhere too fancy anyways.” Maddalyn was part of a family that could dine on whatever luxury they wished- even though Lord Von Blum was no lush, and the one who might best apply to such a descriptor would be Manfred, from your limited exposure to him and what you’d heard, you felt more comfortable with street food, and not only because it was less a ravisher of the wallet.

-----

Many of Zeissenburg’s tallest sky reachers, no matter their age, were not exactly convenient to get roof access to, but you did hear of one after asking merely two locals, that was quite receptive to tourists. It was called Pieter II’s Garden, but it stretched into the heights unlike any image of a garden you had, a tall and sculpted sandstone tower, with carvings of vines and frescoes of leaves and foliage crawling about it, balconies hanging off at varying heights like a great ancient tree.
>>
However, it had only been completed and opened but a few months ago, despite the name being of the last Kaiser. It begun planning and construction before the Emrean War- but the designer himself had been an Emrean architect who had withdrawn his services, and the needs of war had put finishing the building on hold. Its half- finished structure had been a blight on Zeissenburg’s skyline for many years, a symbol of unrealized dreams, before Henrik had restarted construction, and it was finally done- and open to the public as a place of leisure and education, as its interior was not only stocked with gardens but with an aviary, aquariums, ponds, and other encapsulated nature, as well as the economy that sprang around places where people gathered.

Maddalyn wouldn’t be able to appreciate creatures placed behind glass, but all the other things sounded appealing.

Once you arrived, you took her straight to the top- the normal was to climb up and make it the final stop, but climbing down the hill, in your experience, always felt better.

The roof was a flat garden with artificial ponds, which swam with ornamental carp, who shared a space with wild ducks and pigeons who fattened themselves on proffered oats from visitors. You and Maddalyn had gotten cups of frozen yogurt- though the prices, from what you knew of exchange rates, seemed rather exorbitant. Did that mean anything? It could very well just be vendors jacking their prices as high as they could, knowing that demand for their goods was secure. The guards were offered cups- but declined. They were far more comfortable with their hands free, so that they might reach for a pistol or telescoping baton hidden on their person more readily.

“I see her,” Maddalyn said quietly as you both stood at the iron fence that separated you and the incredible height- Pieter II’s Garden wasn’t the tallest building, but it was still high enough to make most of the city look small regardless. It wasn’t a windy day, but an occasional strong breeze made hair fly about and skirts flutter.

“Who?” you asked.

“Our escort,” she tilted her head, “The woman with hair over one eye, in the dress and cardigan and beret.”

“It’s the first I’ve seen her,” you said, and you’d been keeping a good eye out, the guards too. She was a dark haired, slight woman, and she seemed preoccupied with feeding a duck who had decided to host its young atop a building instead of a lake in what might have been short sighted for the waterfowl. “It doesn’t matter anyways, does it?”

“I thought it would reassure you.”

“I mind more for you enjoying yourself than any lurking shadows,” you put a hand on Maddalyn’s small shoulder, “Do you like the view?”
>>
Maddalyn pondered it, as she looked across, and as down as she could through the wrought iron fence. “It’s beautiful, in a way. It’s hard to say how, but…it looks like what I’ve heard people describe a bright, starry night like. So many lives, so far away. Dancing to who knows what. One could be fooled into thinking this is eternal.”

You closed your eyes and tried to imagine it, but it was an incomplete image. You relied on your eyes too much to create such a vivid a picture without them.

“I wonder,” Maddalyn said as she continued to gaze downwards, a breeze blowing about her locks and making the sun glitter off her hair, “How many people who look from this high think the same thoughts as high nobility? How it must be to be responsible for so many, so isolated. How being so much higher makes other humans so much further.”

“They can go down and see them any time they want,” you shrugged.

“Hm.” Maddalyn sighed, “my question from earlier.”

“About the Kaiser, yes,” you said, “He is…kind. Generous. Open hearted, knowledgeable about the mistakes of past and present. He has a vision, but I wouldn’t call him a Utopian, nor a Republican. He’s something else. Something that isn’t dangerous yet, but he could be. He has a grand enough vision, and the means to attempt to make it real. It might sound strange to speak of an adult man, the Kaiser, this way…but he doesn’t seem like he’s reached his potential yet. He isn’t a full grown beast, despite how fierce he already can be.”

“A lion that has not grown its mane.”
>>
Well, the Kaiser did indeed have a mane. “He doesn’t give me the impression of a dangerous man, but what he speaks of, and his power, and his people’s love of him…he could be somebody who could do worse than any villain I’ve encountered, in the name of good. His aura is one of ambition, one with the time and power to fuel it.”

Maddalyn nodded solemnly. “I know well enough myself. A road that seems made of gold as you walk it, but when you look behind you, it’s slick with blood. Though it ought to tell you, how evil a good heart may be. Though can you prevent it? A good and just man is that much more difficult to convince of the error of their ways.”

“Perhaps he could remain a friend,” you said with a small light of optimism, “He is far from the only power in the world, far from the only threat.”

“We will be very bad off if we must pit equals against one another, and the equal is as strong as the Reich,” Maddalyn said darkly.

“…” You had no satisfactory answer to that. “We can stay up here as long as you like.”

“Mm.” Maddalyn continued to look down at the city, its people. “Only somewhat longer. We can’t delay too long, or else dark will delay the flight.”

“We can delay if we wish, I’m sure,” you said. “The golden medallion sanctioning my visit may be gone, but we’re still guests. Paelli is not going anywhere.”

>Talk with Maddalyn about anything else or do anything else?
>Other things? You’ll only have a little time to do anything else unless you stay longer…

Don't worry I'll have the conversation topics I forgot to include from on the plane.
>>
>>5372020
I think we can start heading back to the plane now
>>
>>5372020
>Talk with Maddalyn about anything else or do anything else?
>Other things? You’ll only have a little time to do anything else unless you stay longer…
Combine the two.
Ask Maddalyn if she's like to get a souvenir before we leave since I don't see us being back here any time in the near future.
Also give a polite recognition to our "escort" as we leave. Just a nod or a little wave and "hello" as a tell that we've found them out. Fun between spooks.
Then back to the plane.
>>
>>5372394
+1
I would like to add asking Maddalyn what she thinks about the what we presume to be higher food prices here.
>>
>>5372020
>Try the local sweets.
>>
>>5372394
Supporting
>>
>>5372394
-1 to acknowledging the spook, I'd rather not let people know we are capable of detecting tails
>>
>>5372340
Back into the air.

>>5372394
>>5372519
>>5372539
Go for a souvenir. Interact with the wildlife.

>>5372524
You never know what you're gonna get.

>>5372583
Do as always with ghosts, and don't let them think you see them.

Writing.
>>
“I think we’ll be fine heading back now,” Maddalyn said, though you felt you could handle at least a couple more things.

“Do you want a souvenir?” you asked, “We won’t be coming back for a while.” If ever, depending on how the future might go...

“Hmm…” Maddalyn wrapped her arms around herself, “I do. If you find some sort of jewelry or decoration, I want to wear something you’d like.” She flicked her hand upwards, and the ring of your unity flashed in the sun, “Or perhaps some sweets…”

“Why not both?” you asked, “Both can easily be found on the way down and over.” There was no argument against getting more, so you proceeded on back- though, feeling cute, as you passed by the Imperial tail, you have the woman a small wave. She looked up with a tired looking eye, and raised a puzzled hand- it made you feel a little awkward. There’d be no way you’d have guessed unless Maddalyn said so.

Maddalyn didn’t fail to notice, as you went down the stairs. “What are you doing?” she hissed, “Don’t acknowledge them.”

“It’s just a little game,” you brushed off the concern, “I was told. Let them think I just got lucky. Wrack their heads over how I might know.”

“Well, don’t anymore,” Maddalyn pouted, “I’d rather not those sorts of people take more interest in us.”

Your wife’s mood was calmed with the discovery of candied fruits, suspended in cubes of sweet transparent jelly and dusted on all sides but the top with sugar powder, a singular window to see what sort of sweet was within. An inspiration from Vitelia, apparently- the opposite of that one sort of candy Wladysaw had given that one time, where the contents were hidden. Instead, the content and flavor were immediately apparent to those who could see through them.

Which meant that Maddalyn could not see what was in them. So you made a game of having her guess, holding the “window” away from her, so it wouldn’t be so clear she couldn’t see it either way.
>>
There were jewelry and fashion stores on the way down- any gathering place being an unspoken contest of appearance by anybody who cared about how they would be seen, escalated by the amount in this silent battle. If you were to say so, Maddalyn outmatched her competition, even if her height would cause her to vanish into even a modest crowd. She wasn’t much one for fashion herself- a lack of ability to perceive color precluded that. So fashionable wear seemed unusual- until you realized she wanted you to decorate her- it wasn’t for her sake alone, so such was something you’d keep in mind when you made your selection…

>What sort of accessory or jewelry do you want to get Maddalyn to wear? It ought to be something more visible than not.

It had only been a brief visit to the Imperial Capital, as you returned to the airfield to fly out. Not bad for a brief stopover on the way elsewhere though.

Much as you might have liked to collect information on the new Reich gear you saw, Covacs had rushed you through it all. A manufacturing company might have been valuable information, but the only markings you saw were ones you already knew to be Grossreich unit identification markings, and the rifles appeared to be no different at first glance from normal Kronerwerke Model 1914 self-loading rifles that were the Reich’s standard. Somewhat disappointing. Yet would you have expected to be allowed to find anything of use? The Kaiser said it himself. No matter the pleasantries, you were of Strossvald.

Still. It was a bit disappointing. You tried to note down what you noticed about the new tanks anyways. Unlike the KT-24s you were familiar with, these new armored vehicles seemed the same size, perhaps somewhat larger, than the m/32. The gun looked to be about a five centimeter cannon with a standard coaxial machine gun and a hull gun, though the front glacis had a strong looking slope to it, rather like the Emrean tank Framboise had brought over to Sosaldt, though the craftsmanship was not so intricate, more angular than rounded. More importantly, just looking at the size of the structures and gun, it was clearly not at the limits of its potential.

“What are you writing down there?” Maddalyn said as she sat by you on the plane, a box of the fruit treats still in hand, forming a checkerboard in their container with the difference between white sugar and cocoa dust between each. They were window-down; but could be discovered for what they were by merely turning it up.

“Things I noticed,” you said, “Say, the food prices…” even those treats had been more expensive than you thought, and looking about even with the street vendors, it all seemed inflated, even outside of the tourism attraction. “Why do you think they’re higher?”
>>
Maddalyn raised her shoulders, not seeing a great consideration. “Who can say? There might be shortages, but there also might not be. Food could just cost more money. The Archduchy subsidizes farming in order to keep foodstuffs for the lower classes inexpensive. Maybe the Reich sees that as unnecessary. Maybe everything, not just food, is more expensive in Zeissenburg. It’s unwise to make assumptions based on a singular city.”

The Reich’s social welfare policies were a factor in the equation to be considered…by others. For now, you merely put the possibilities away in your head for later. You weren’t staying in the Reich long enough to be concerned about budgeting for food now anyways.

Before your plane went up, you heard, and watched, a pair of long ranged Reich fighters rise off the airstrip. Twin engines, unlike the interceptors that had escorted you in. They wouldn’t be going all the way to Paelli, but they would be there for the most theoretically dangerous leg. Air piracy was not a huge threat so much as accidental engagement by island holdouts or patrol ships, or opportunistic sea patrols, so a firm showing of the Reich’s hand would convince either of the Vitelian states to not risk provoking the local power into an excuse to retaliate.

In the meantime, you sat with Maddalyn, talked more. About what was to come.

“What would our duties to the children be?” You asked Maddalyn, “What with your resources…”

“The best tutelage. I would expect they be multilingual before adulthood. Tutors for proper manners will be a necessity. I apologize, Richter, but you won’t do for either.”

“I know we shouldn’t do everything, but I want to know what we will do,” you said, “Or are you saying you believe they should be raised as you must have been? My parents were very involved in my growth.”

“Public schooling will be unacceptable, of course,” Maddalyn said, “Some things must come from us. Mostly regarding our families, our legacies, our expectations…but otherwise, if they are to excel, they must be entrusted to the best.”

You didn’t particularly like the sound of that. It sounded as though others would be parenting your children more than you would be. There was time to consider it all though.

“I had a concern as well,” you said, “You have such a small body…will it be safe for you to give birth?”

Maddalyn twitched uncomfortably. “I don’t…that’s not…” She took a breath, “Surgery is an option. We do not live in an age where we need do things exactly as we did as when we lived in mud huts.”

“Though thinking about it,” you placed your hands on her hips, “You do have a good width, don’t you?”

Maddalyn shifted. “Richter, you’re not…” you moved your hands more to the rear. “We’ve already done it on this plane once today, find some patience.”
>>
“I’m allowed to touch you without that intent,” you huffed as you prodded her bum with your fingers. “Though am I sensing some bossy attitude?”

Maddalyn thought a moment, and her tone of voice changed. “Consort.”

“Consort?”

“Address me as my lady before a question, Von Tracht,” Maddalyn said with a tight, clipped voice.

“What do you wish, my lady?”

“Your untoward touching was not rightly earned.” She tilted her chin up and pointed to her ear, “You have duties. Attend to them.”

“Yes, my lady,” you moved to touch your tongue against the aperture of her ear.

Maddalyn’s princess play ended as she fell asleep under your attack, rather than escalating, leaving you to look out the portal in the flank of the plane, watching the continent disappear, replaced by the ocean. Somewhere to the north would be Vitelia, and its chaos. To the south, the Grand Zee Maelstrom, that swirled off of the Maelstrom that encroached on Paelli.

How close you would be, to the edge of your world, where the sun was creeping down into twilight. As Maddalyn slept on you, you did your best to acquaint yourself with this place- these “Confederate Princedoms” of Paelli, the place where the far west became Vinstraga.

-----

It was night when you landed- but it wasn’t quite time to settle yet. After a little more driving, then you’d be ready to bed down and prepare for your holiday proper. You’d already planned for where you wanted to go first, in this country…

>The beaches of the west coast of Paelli, where the Maelstrom’s influence touched. Mysterious and mystic seas, crystal and ivory sand, and of equal importance, getting Maddalyn into proper uniform.
>The northern mountains- where the Maelstrom blew over in places, and where the mountainfolk resided, Paellan sorts more publicly minded. A culture more receptive to visitors than the sorts back home.
>The Memorial Fields, where the Kalleans had invaded, and been repelled, not so long ago. Amongst the wrecks and craters and monuments, you’d find a past battlefield of the Silver Lances…
>Some other sort of place/activity?
>>
>>5372998
>The northern mountains- where the Maelstrom blew over in places, and where the mountainfolk resided, Paellan sorts more publicly minded. A culture more receptive to visitors than the sorts back home.

Mountains>Memorial>Beaches, get the sightseeing out of the way first and end the trip relaxing on the beaches
>>
>>5372991
>What sort of accessory or jewelry do you want to get Maddalyn to wear? It ought to be something more visible than not.
A torque bangle, jewelled with some of that fine black stone we saw in Henrik's palace.
>>5372998
>The Memorial Fields, where the Kalleans had invaded, and been repelled, not so long ago. Amongst the wrecks and craters and monuments, you’d find a past battlefield of the Silver Lances…
You can visit a battlefield in any weather, let's save the beach and mountain hikes for a nice looking day.
>>
>>5372991
>>What sort of accessory or jewelry do you want to get Maddalyn to wear? It ought to be something more visible than not.
A belly/waist chain with some sort of blue stone.

>>5372998
>The beaches of the west coast of Paelli, where the Maelstrom’s influence touched. Mysterious and mystic seas, crystal and ivory sand, and of equal importance, getting Maddalyn into proper uniform.
>The northern mountains- where the Maelstrom blew over in places, and where the mountainfolk resided, Paellan sorts more publicly minded. A culture more receptive to visitors than the sorts back home.

I like these two, but if I had to choose one, then the beach.
>>
>>5372998
>The beaches of the west coast of Paelli, where the Maelstrom’s influence touched. Mysterious and mystic seas, crystal and ivory sand, and of equal importance, getting Maddalyn into proper uniform.

>>5373038
>The northern mountains- where the Maelstrom blew over in places, and where the mountainfolk resided, Paellan sorts more publicly minded. A culture more receptive to visitors than the sorts back home.
>>
>>5372998
>Some other sort of place/activity?
To the edge of the universe. Or as far away as we can go on the map.
>>
>>5372998
>>What sort of accessory or jewelry do you want to get Maddalyn to wear? It ought to be something more visible than not.
A turquoise necklace would look good I think. You can get a relatively big stone so it can stand out too. I don't think it would be very much good for higher class events but I think it suits a more comfortable setting like this well.

>The beaches of the west coast of Paelli, where the Maelstrom’s influence touched. Mysterious and mystic seas, crystal and ivory sand, and of equal importance, getting Maddalyn into proper uniform.
Put the swimsuit on. Stop having it be off.
>>
>>5372998
>What sort of accessory or jewelry do you want to get Maddalyn to wear? It ought to be something more visible than not.
I don't remember the specifics of Maddy's sight, but I hope Richter does. I'd like to choose some kind of necklace or bracelet that Maddy could see the details of.

>The Memorial Fields, where the Kalleans had invaded, and been repelled, not so long ago. Amongst the wrecks and craters and monuments, you’d find a past battlefield of the Silver Lances…
>>5373037 has it right about the weather.
>>
>>5373574
Where does it say anything about the current weather? If anything, since we don't know the weather is bad, we should save the fields for if the weather ever turns bad.
>>
>>5372998
>The northern mountains- where the Maelstrom blew over in places, and where the mountainfolk resided, Paellan sorts more publicly minded. A culture more receptive to visitors than the sorts back home.

Wonder if we'll run into Mal's folk, up north should be near the border after all
>>
>>5373624
>Where does it say anything about the current weather?

>“I meant with your uniform on properly,” Magnus elaborated, “I don’t know why your stomach isn’t out, but you don’t need to show much to look lovely.”
>“I. Uh.” If only you hadn’t left your coat back at the tavern, damn it. “It’s cold, that’s why.”

>Maddalyn approached, in a yellow and cream short sleeved dress, a thin scarf around her neck for the odd chilly spring breeze that might blow through.

It's still spring, and if we can assume if it's cold enough that people are still wearing scarves as a precaution and Anya isn't comfortable bearing her stomach without a jacket, then it's probably not averaging ideal beach temperatures just yet.
My thinking is, we'd be better waiting until we've got a good sign that it'll be warm, since we've seen more reasonable evidence that it could snap cold than not. Rather than rushing to the beach right away and being the only ones there enjoying a cold swim because we took the weather for holding granted.
>>
Rolled 2 (1d3)

>>5373031
>>5373758
Up in the peaks, among the foliage.

>>5373037
>>5373574
Old battlefields- for once, the fighting is long gone before you.

>>5373385
To the edge- into the storm.

>>5373038
>>5373252
>>5373482
Hitting up the beach.

>>5373037
A bangle of black stone,.

>>5373038
A chain with blue.

>>5373482
A necklace of turqoise.

>>5373574
Ensure anything has some sort of textural detail.

I'll roll a d3 to choose one of these, then. We'll say the chance is based off of what you could actually find.

Writing. Tomorrow I'm catching a flight down to see relatives for about two weeks, so that'll probably be a day of disruption, we'll see. I'll definitely lose my OP formatting powers.
>>
>>5374082
Oops, copy paste mistake, was meant to be mountains, I am >>5373252 on mobile.
>>
The mountains had been your choice of first destination- though it had been a hard choice between that, the beaches, and the Memorial Fields- the plains littered with monuments both of stone and steel and scars on the land, where the Kallean Invasion had been fended off, just barely. That was where the Silver Lances had fought.

You were unfamiliar with the local weather, and though Paelli had a pleasant, mild climate in general (despite being adjacent to something called a Maelstrom), it couldn’t hurt to be careful. Going to the beaches would at least ideally not have a cloudy day. However, the mountains could be. One wasn’t expected to wear swimsuits up there, after all.

Around Maddalyn’s waist was the souvenir you’d gotten Maddalyn (albeit with her money);a silver accessory, a thinly linked chain that wrapped around the waist, hanging with carved stones. Blue and black were what you thought would go well with it- the black stone in the imperial palace had inspired some coloration, the other, Maddalyn’s eyes (though black would reflect that too sometimes)- and the chain was bedecked with an inset of carved lapiz lazuli, in the shape of a sea lotus. Something that Maddalyn’s eyes could appreciate, that particular detail. Though perhaps you could find somebody to put in onyx and sapphires, maybe turquoise? A pale sort would match her eye…

She had been pleased, though you could bet that she would have been happy with anything. She wore it for your pleasure. Her appreciation of you for all to see, besides the golden band on her finger.

Some supplementary reading was accomplished, while you had watched for the Paellan coast to appear, about your destination.

The Confederate Princedoms of Paelli had fortunes that swung pendulously depending on the favor of fate. When times were good, when the Maelstroms did not block away the west from east, Paelli had found incredible wealth throughout history. Since the Confederation had been born approximately two hundred years ago, from a conglomerate of nobles and merchants and aristocracy whose autonomy stretched back to the collapse of the Dheg Empire two hundred years further beyond that and persisting as a client of the Second Vitelian Empire, that wealth had been concentrated into a nation state, and a policy that was criticized as reckless, but from which the Paellans never seemed to break from. For Paellans, the guide read, the parties never ended. In times of plenty, they gained and saved, for the metaphorical winter when the Maelstrom descended. Even through that, the upper class partied still, and the state and its pieces simply accrued debt upon debt until the Maelstroms rose again. They rode upon bubbling seafoam, daring it to collapse beneath them.
>>
The west had been blocked away for forty eight years, now. Paelli presently acted as though it would rise at any moment, preparing to ride a wave of wealth they thought inevitable by adopting absolutely no austerity.

To be true, the endless consumption and optimism made them good business partners. Even though the poor became more and more destitute to keep the delusion going. The party only came to a an uneasy halt when the Vitelian Civil War began in earnest, and when Kallec invaded only last year. Apparently, there was now a new round of bubble-riding, in an attempt to force those dark times behind and drive the Maelstrom away.

Paelli had a somewhat odd culture, that way. Still of Vinstraga but decisively colored by the far west’s beliefs, that gave it its own unique outlook on swaying the future by trapping it in celebration and keeping it drunk until night came around and the music started again, red lamps hung out the windows once more.

Enlightened beforehand, it was no surprise to look out the dark window and see the squat capital of Marenabocca that sparkled with such an array of lights it was like a colony of multicolored lightning bugs showing up early for summer, old looking architecture draped over with all manner of modern decorative invention. A clear disparity existed, as rickety slum towns and shacks swarmed in swirls around lacquered high class manors and villas that looked like scattered candy on the ground, but all of it was covered in lights and garlands the same.

The flag over the airfield told of a western influence you hadn’t seen before- though you had read that the Paellans revered the Ocean and the Wind, it hadn’t referred to them in the way clearly illustrated on the flag.

Dueling dragons, chasing each other’s tails. A blue and a white sea serpent, over a background of gold and blue, white in between.

The Sergeant and Maddalyn left you behind in conversing with the attendant who would be escorting you to your hotel for the night, before you were to head off to the mountains in the northwest of the country. The attendant seemed to be of Paelli’s army- a black uniformed man with blue accents, gold piping on his trousers and a bright brass gorget at his throat, his cap folded into a cylinder atop his head with a brass button at its peak. He was definitely of western blood, a much deeper sort than the Dhegyars in the Reich, a much more recent ancestry, from the heaviness of his eyelids and the dark hair, mixed in with the dusky tone of skin that Vitelian coastal peoples bore.
>>
Despite the difference of appearance of its people, Paelli’s primary language was Vitelian, and scarcely a soul would be found here speaking New Nauk. After all, Alexander might have defeated the Second Vitelian Empire- but he did not conquer it, instead sweeping over the north and the east. Few could say why. Some said he thought it too large a task for him at the time, others said he respected Vitelian culture enough to stay it from his plans of purgation.

“We’ll be going to the outer estates,” Maddalyn relayed to you when the foreign babble had completed, “I’m not in much a mood to tour the Marenaboccan night life after such a long flight.”

“You’re surely rested,” you stroked her hair with your fingers, “You did naught but sleep the whole way.”

“I’d prefer it once we’ve been here longer,” Maddalyn said, “To the mountains first, as planned. The green hairs won’t be terribly different.”

“In a rush to break in the hotel bed, then?”

Maddalyn’s cheeks pinkened and she put her hand in your face with a rough shove. “Rude.”

“You know,” you recovered, and diverted, “I found something new out about my driver, Malachi. The mountainfolk crewman. He’s probably foreign, but not just from the mountains. He just might be from Kallec. My other men who had been here in the past recognized something.”

Maddalyn put a finger to her lip. “He’d have come a long way.”

The conversation continued in the car you were driven out of the city in. It was slow going- the streets were crowded, and few civilians respected that the streets were for cars. More than a few times you passed horse carriages, even palanquins and rickshaws. There was a chaos to the place, but at least the more upscale sections were kept clean by roving bands of dark-grey uniformed debtors.

“I don’t think Malachi had squinty eyes,” you said, though you struggled to remember him without a mask or goggles.

“Kalleans are Nauk-descended like their northern neighbors,” Maddalyn said, “They won’t have much of Zhantao in them, even though there’s just as wide a land crossing. The westerners all came in from the sea.”

“So would being a Kallean Mountainfolk mean anything?” you asked, “You said that the Paellan ones would have similar culture to the ones we know.”

“Similar appearance as well. They mislike the far west, for their reasons,” Maddalyn said, “I’m no expert, but from what I know, Kallec is an exception with its green hairs. They like to draw them to their Republican Army, because they like their experience with harsher living. So Kallean Mountainfolk have been influenced to be more…militaristic. Less isolated. More eager to go out and mingle, in a manner that makes Kalleans have far greater mosshead blood in their population than any other country on this continent.”

“I see.”

“They’d have a violent variant of that baseless pride mossheads have.”
>>
It would explain Malachi’s battle competence. Though not his driving skills, necessarily.

The hotel, when you reached it, was a far-western styled lacquered wood set of square stacks, lit up by multicolored lights that cast their candy-coating-esque walls in dyes of every color of the rainbow. The inside was far more familiar in décor, though, and your foreign appearance deferred to by more of the duller-clothed debt servants at a glance, though you saw more than a few gawking at the vivid hue of Maddalyn’s hair.

It turned out that vivid hair dyes were a trend amongst the aristocracy, as you saw a pair of local woman in flowing robes over tight dresses pass by, clutching a fancily suited man, all with different sorts of artificial color crowning them, differing shades of blues.

Would you dye Maddalyn’s hair? you looked over her, Maybe a blonde, not one of those garish blues… No, you wouldn’t, though. At least, not without more than passing thought. Though an alternative seemed to be only having a single lock of hair dyed- though this seemed to be for those of not quite so opulent class.

It was explained to you, secondhand, by the Sergeant, that the blue hair dyes were a particular rather expensive and unique set of hues. To wear them was a symbol of wealth- and to maintain the color was important, because it faded quickly. To have colored but dull hair was to look like a phony, as it were. Hence why some kept a constant bright hue in only a single stripe.

Suddenly it was clear what Hausen’s idle comment one night about blue bush had been referring to. You’d assumed it was an actual plant, but no- it must have been a quite wealthy person indeed to bother with that level of commitment. Unless it was a dirty and fancy metaphor.

Dinner was a local fashion- one Maddalyn seemed more familiar with than you, as you were rather dumbstruck by fish roe atop rice, followed by diced cuttlefish and pickled vegetables. There were other options, thankfully. Roasted chicken and seared pork in sweet sauce that caramelized on the meat, overseen by uniformed chefs well attended to by grey suited folk.

The bedroom was not the most luxurious- and rather tight in space. Not much meant to be stayed in when the party was outside, but you were only stopping here a short time. The guards still considered their quarters quite a bit much.

The bed itself was not christened with lovemaking that night- instead, you held her in her arms, let her relax. There was plenty, plenty more time for that brand of fun elsewhere, and when she’d be in a better mood. Something about this city had made her less comfortable…

-----
>>
In the grey, cloudy morning, you set forth for the mountains- close enough to the west that the influence of the Maelstroms blew over them. They weren’t particularly attractive to Paellans- the Mountainfolk’s feelings of them seemed mutual- but the latter were certainly appreciative of any business that came their way, considering the wealth that might spring on over, regardless of how much was actually borrowed.

Marenabocca had cooled from the night before, significantly, though it was still noisy and bright. The people had to sleep sometime. Though the dull of the sky not showed something of the city that had been hidden in the dark, where the starlight had been unable to penetrate, where the garish gas lights scattered their own sort of concealing cloak.

No sorrow was felt leaving it behind. A bustling and bright city like that wasn’t your sort of place anyways. The relative wilderness would be.

Upon reaching the foothills, some information was briefly gathered by you and the bodyguards- though your role was mostly escorting Maddalyn about. Absolutely nobody here spoke New Nauk, a curious experience, considering Sosalia’s universal language. It had a vaguely threatening air, as the only other people who you had met and couldn’t understand had been Twaryians.

Still. The locals seemed receptive enough, excited, even. For you were clearly wealthy, and were also, firmly not of western blood. So the best things to do came tumbling easily…though you’d have to hike out to it all, given the scattered nature of mountain communes.

>The mountain hot springs, places to cleans the spirit as well as the body. That you brought no swimwear was no problem- and maybe you could make up for not doing anything in bed last night…
>An expedition to the ancient ruins in the peaks was in order. It was unlikely you’d find anything, for multiple reasons, but treasure hunting wasn’t the goal. Exploration was.
>Have a scenic outing on the mountainside paths. There didn’t need to be anything special. Though perhaps you’d like to borrow an arm of some sort to have an opportunistic hunt…
>Some other idea?
>>
>>5374350
>The mountain hot springs, places to cleans the spirit as well as the body. That you brought no swimwear was no problem- and maybe you could make up for not doing anything in bed last night…
Hopefully we can do more than one activity here in the mountains
>>
>>5374350
>An expedition to the ancient ruins in the peaks was in order. It was unlikely you’d find anything, for multiple reasons, but treasure hunting wasn’t the goal. Exploration was.

Can we actually see the Maelstrom from where we are? Would be interesting to see it in the flesh and I believe Maddy said so as well.
>>
>>5374350
>The mountain hot springs, places to cleans the spirit as well as the body. That you brought no swimwear was no problem- and maybe you could make up for not doing anything in bed last night…
Get Maddalyn nice a loosened up before we do anything else.
Really hope we get around to doing all of these though.
>>
>>5374380
Also this is a long term thing but just an observation that picking up some Vitelian might be useful, especially if the IO is sending Richter out this way.
>>
>>5374350
>>An expedition to the ancient ruins in the peaks was in order. It was unlikely you’d find anything, for multiple reasons, but treasure hunting wasn’t the goal. Exploration was.
You gotta get a little dirty before you take a bath silly.
>>
>Expensive blue dye
Ruh roh. I sure hope this isn't another city built on child slavery or anything haha.

>>5374350
>An expedition to the ancient ruins in the peaks was in order. It was unlikely you’d find anything, for multiple reasons, but treasure hunting wasn’t the goal. Exploration was.
>>
>>5372991
>the front glacis had a strong looking slope to it, rather like the Emrean tank Framboise had brought over to Sosaldt, though the craftsmanship was not so intricate, more angular than rounded
Yeah, that's not a good sign for Emre. Good, fuck the frogs I hope they all get put in camps.

>>5374340
I like that the Maelstrom's effect on Paeli is more thought through than the seasons in Westeros.

>Have a scenic outing on the mountainside paths. There didn’t need to be anything special. Though perhaps you’d like to borrow an arm of some sort to have an opportunistic hunt…
Bratty gingers? Civil wars? I just want to gri- kill.
>>
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>>5374366
>>5374403
Hot springs episode! With only two people.

>>5374380
>>5374415
>>5374473
Poke around some ruins. Some spooky ruins.

>>5374499
Find something to kill, presumably so you can feed it to your bratty ginger to correct her behavior. Because she's hungry.

>>5374409
Figure out some phrases to whisper in your wife's ear. Hopefully it'll be better than your Emrean.

Writing.

>>5374366
>>5374403
>Hopefully we can do more than one activity here in the mountains
It's perfectly fine to get to everything- it's just that having to hike everywhere means that...well, Maddalyn wasn't one of the physically fit options. It'll take a bit to go through, but if it's what's wanted, that's cool.

>>5374473
>Ruh roh. I sure hope this isn't another city built on child slavery or anything haha.
Not child slavery! Just plain old fashioned debt slavery. Though only in the times where everybody isn't on the upward trajectory.

>>5374499
>I like that the Maelstrom's effect on Paeli is more thought through than the seasons in Westeros.
I appreciate it, even though the counterargument to being a better author than Gurm is for him to laugh and then crush me into a fine powder with the sheer density of his accumulated money.
Though really the Maelstrom is a strange and eerie phenomena that even people in the setting prefer not to disturb if they can help it, for its uncaring brutality for all that dare to cross its path. Richter (and players in general) is about as far as one can get from any place touched by the Maelstroms- nice and distant from the question of lurking unreality.

Speaking of, I think I wanted to find some excuse to post this updated map, but I forgot. Hopefully the retcon to expand the amount of land doesn't retroactively cause too many problems.
>>
>>5374380
>Can we actually see the Maelstrom from where we are? Would be interesting to see it in the flesh and I believe Maddy said so as well.
Where you are right now? No. When you venture forth? Perhaps. The thing is that the Maelstrom isn't actually something you can see from far away, as strange as that sounds for what are considered to be colossal storms that ought to be great grey and black walls on the horizon. In order to properly perceive it, one must be rather dangerously close...
Whether Maddalyn can see it is a different story.
>>
>>5374676
Just a minor nitpick that Geant Solitaire's font is different from the rest and Sosaldt isn't fully faded out (though that might be intentional) otherwise nice map update
>>
First thing when you woke up, got Maddalyn up as well, and saw the Sergeant and his partner were well used to waking up at the time dictated by the bugle, let alone the sun’s rise- you had breakfast and planned to venture up the mountain footpaths to where ancient ruins lay.

Not ruins as ancient as the soulbinders, though. Merely local temples that had stopped being cared for during the time of the Nauk Imperial, well within the era of recorded history, and had been used here and again sparsely since. Still, it had been neglected now for plenty enough time to become a historical artifact. Some shared interest in discovery for you and Maddalyn to share. Something to explore. Though you were warned that the paths were better suited for goats than for men- Maddalyn, as a tradeoff to how adorable she was, how ideal the ratio of fat to slimness was, had little in the way of hard muscle. She certainly would not have the energy for multiple hikes in a day. Perhaps not even for one. Elevation had a way of sapping strength unexpectedly.

At the very least, if your retinue was any indication, Maddalyn could grow some muscles and still have an absolutely fantastic ass.

The first meal of the day was tea and a dense bread baked by the mountainfolk tribes, smeared with wild berry jam, as well as fatback both cold and fried. A simple and hearty introduction to the day. You and the guards dressed in simple trousers and long sleeved shirts, with light overcoats for the wind, while Maddalyn wore a knee length white dress, with a blue-grey overcoat. The morning had a warm light to it, but the mountain winds could be harsh, on top of the air being cooler in general up here.

Unlike your last passage through mystic mountains, this one was done without worry, without hurrying, without fear of huge living stones or their migrations. Yes, they were around, but none that came up higher than the hip, and even the largest were incredibly passive.

“They’re sated by the currents of presence,” Maddalyn told you- keeping her distance. She seemed perturbed by the innocent crustaceans, staring with their multitude of dumb, beady eyes that seemed incapable of perpetrating any evil.

“Can you see the Maelstrom from here?” you asked Maddalyn, a little away from the guards trailing behind, with packs on their backs full of water and rations. A pack which you also bore, though Maddalyn did not. “I can’t see it. It looks like ordinary sky up to the horizon, to that bone-white mountain.” Appropriately named Bone Mountain, said geological eminence was the boundary of where it was safe to go. Climbing on that peak or beyond it invited peril none would be able to save you from.
>>
Maddalyn nodded in a discomforted snap of the chin to your question. “I…can. It’s not like a storm over there. It’s reaching out and pulling back. It’s like…the branches of a tree, blowing in the wind…” She bit her lip, “I can see its danger. But I…I want to get closer. It makes me so curious…”

“One thing at a time, dearest,” you came up behind her and squeezed her bottom affectionately, “We’re not in a hurry.”

“Mm.” She glanced at you. “Not here.”

“Why would I propose doing that here?” you spluttered.

“After on the plane?” her tone was critical but the look in her eye teased, “Where wouldn’t your perversion extend?”

Judge Above, she could be tempting when she felt like it.

After some time, though, the gulf between Maddalyn’s lack of physical training and the rest of your party’s began to show. She was pale, in a hard sweat, panted and gasped as she stumbled up the paths.

“Wait a moment, dearest,” you said as you lifted her and set her onto a stone, “You’re exhausted.”

“I…I don’t…” she gasped for air and shook like a leaf, “Maybe just for a little while…”

“My lady,” the sergeant approached and knelt, “Drink water and slow your breath. You will be alright so long as you do not overexert yourself further.”

“B-but…” Maddalyn panted, drops of sweat pouring down her face, “We’re only…only a…”

“Your husband will carry you,” the Sergeant declared in a flat tone.

Yes. Yes he would.

The exertion of carrying Maddalyn in turn exhausted you, and by the time you reached the ruins, you couldn’t admire them- you sprawled on the ground, in the same state Maddalyn had been before. Though she was quick to reward your effort- she laid your head on her lap, stroked your hair, kissed you on the cheeks and mouth…she had a glad look on her, one that melted away any irritation at being so tired already.

“My knight is so strong,” she cooed at you as she bent down to kiss you on the forehead.

Needless to say, you managed to recover quickly, letting you behold the isolated ruin on the mountainside. The Sergeant’s aide had carried a small camera about as wide across as the length of a hand- and you’d already heard its clacking shutter a couple times thus far, despite you giving no instruction.
>>
The place had been constructed by means that would have been difficult for the locals, or for anybody. They must have been assembled over a great period of time, as great stone blocks of the same sort of rock as the mountain the ruins resided on formed the variable square shrines and collapsed piles- a grand entrance into the side of the mountain beckoned with a promise of sights few had seen, though these ruins would surely not have been news to archaeologists, for how the mountainfolk readily relayed its location.

Still, though. The exploration, and that Maddalyn’s eyes would be different from other gazes cast over the stone.

“So what is this,” you asked Maddalyn, “Do you know? It’s not very convenient to reach, for certain.”

“It faces west,” Maddalyn said, drawing her finger from the tunnel entrance to the horizon, “It might be a temple of some sort. We’ll have to look around inside and around the piles to see.”

“Not a tomb, though, right?”

“No,” Maddalyn shook her head, “Mountainfolk bury their dead in valleys and crevasses. Peaks are unsuitable. Too far from the Earth.” She pointed to the seemingly innocent sky beyond the Bone Mountain, “Too close to that, too.”

The answer to what the place was, as you poked about inside with an electric torch came more quickly than expected, as your guards waited outside.

“Ah.” Maddalyn said, as she stared into darkness. She didn’t need the light you had to see. “Look. Do you see that inscription over top of that passage deeper?”

You flashed your light over. “I won’t be able to read it.”

“That doesn’t matter. Look above the runes.”

The light went upwards. “The Island of Prophecy,” you recognized the symbols, “The hammer of Holy Judgement. This is…a temple dedicated to the Judge Above?”
“Yes,” Maddalyn pointed upwards, “Do you see how high they cut the ceiling? Mossheads don’t mind closed, tight spaces. This is a church of some sort.”

A hand went to touch the cold stone of the wall. Maybe this had been made by Nauk missionaries? Or maybe the mountainfolk had repurposed some other sort of cave or tunnel to provide a place of worship? The Nauk Imperial did not stretch this far, in their great empire- not as far as you knew, or what was concluded. Yet the faith they brought clearly spread this far. Unless the dedication was made later in history, of course…

The temple was empty of anything but its walls, though. No curious artifacts would aid identification- you’d just have to go further inside.
>>
A main hall came into view as you poked the beam of the electric torch about past the portal with the carvings above it. More carvings ringed the walls- the familiar view of rows of stone benches and a shrine at the head, though the space was far higher than it was wide. Attendants in its time would have been packed in, given barely more space than what might have resided in the alcoves set into the walls below the carvings of script.

“Do you know what language this is?” you asked Maddalyn, “Is it mountainfolk?”

“It is,” she said, looking without regards to where your light was, “It’s a sort I’ve seen before. It’s hard to say how old it is…most mountain tongue hasn’t changed much for a long time.”

“So what does it say?”

“Blessing and scriptures,” Maddalyn said, “The start of it. The Imposition. In the beginning, there was nothing but chaos. With the first Light came Order, and Chaos was driven before it. With Order came Man, and Man carried the Light of the Judge Above in his Soul. Ye, go forth, Man, and cleanse this Chaos. And so on.”

“It looks like the same thing, repeated,” you said, as you shined a ring around yourself, “Is it?”

“Yes. Like a chant around the room.” Maddalyn pointed into the dark, “Look. Beyond the altar, a door.” She moved forth without prompting, and when she reached the end of the room, she jumped back, startled. A pair of wisps flew out from the passage beyond, dim motes of dust with trails behind them like comets, making whistling singing sounds as they flew overhead and into the ceiling of the church, where they vanished.

“Were those dangerous?” you asked warily.

“No, no,” Maddalyn caught her breath, “I was just startled. Those are harmless little Songbirds. Motile earth pearls of a sort. They do their best to copy noises they hear and hide until something finds them, then they run away somewhere else.” She looked beyond. “There’s a cavern beyond here…” She looked back expectantly to you- the confidence with how she moved in the darkness must have made you seem like you were the blind one. “Do you want to look..?”

>No. Spooky caverns that spirits just came out of were not a place you thought it’d be a good idea to head into. Old ruins might be dark, but they had familiarity.
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
>Being in the dark too long was disconcerting. You’d rather be out in the sun than in here any longer- for the rest of your trip up here.
>Other?

>>5374692
Noted, and yes- the territory is still widely known as Sosaldt, after all, despite present controls.
>>
Oh, also, today I'm taking my flight, so this will be the only update for today, probably. Just so the delay is explained.
>>
>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
>>
>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
>>
>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
I'm glad Maddy seems to be liking it. Too often her and Richter's relationship seemed like she hid her discomfort.
>>
>>5374676
Living in Altskaeg must suck.

>>5374869
>It’s like…the branches of a tree, blowing in the wind
GRIFFITH

>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
Cave explorer!
>>
>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
>>
>>5374872
>>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
grab flashlight go innacave
>>
>>5374872
>Being in the dark too long was disconcerting. You’d rather be out in the sun than in here any longer- for the rest of your trip up here.
>>
>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
>>
>>5374872
>>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…
>>
>>5374872
>Why not? There wouldn’t be anything dangerous in there. These were just old ruins, and the depths might hold further answers to this place…

Not sure how accurate the first part is, but it's worth exploring anyway.
>>
Alright I'm here and not trashed from a day of flying.

>>5374882
>>5374895
>>5374907
>>5374933
>>5374940
>>5375078
>>5375238
>>5375251
>>5375455
Going down into the dark.

>>5375206
Now hold on a moment-

Writing.

>>5374933
>Living in Altskaeg must suck.
It does. It's cold and stormy, and it's only worse with the maelstrom waxing. Though the locals are fond of how it sucks. They're understandably hardy.
>>
“Sure,” you followed behind Maddalyn, “What’s the worst that might be waiting, anyways?”

“…” Maddalyn closed her eyes, “No, it won’t be here.”

“Is that a joke?” It wasn’t, but Maddalyn went on with the better option of not saying what. Frankly you agreed- discussing it felt like it might summon such a thing.

“It connects to a natural cavern…” Maddalyn said before you could even see for yourself. “Look, there’s stairs in places. How far down do you think it goes..?”

You shouldn’t be getting too far from the entrance, you thought as you followed Maddalyn, who was already rushing down heedless of your torch light. The Sergeant and his partner couldn’t help you if you went too deep. “Hey, wait,” you said as you tried not to rush carelessly with only the torch light to go by.

Finally you caught up to Maddalyn and put a hand on her shoulder. “Oh,” she turned to look at you with wide eyes, “That’s right, there’s no light, is there?”

That would have been obvious to anybody with a concept of sight. Yet that was not something Maddalyn had. There was no night sky, no stars or moon in this darkness, nothing leaking in through curtains or doors. It was pitch dark.

“Please stay with me,” you summarized your concern. A look around with your torch. “What would they even come down here for? I don’t see any scripture or decorations. Maybe they used it for storage and everything’s been plundered?”

“Maybe they just blocked it off and the obstruction was cleared away. We won’t know until we reach the bottom.” Maddalyn took hold of your hand and pulled you along gently. How far down you might have to go seemed of no concern to her…

Then you heard an odd scraping.

“Wait,” you tugged on Maddalyn, “I heard something.”

“Eh? Maddalyn looked at you, then looked behind you, and she yelped. “Eeek!”
>>
You swung the torch around- and saw what she saw. A mottled-red colored beast hanging off the ceiling, a great maw that gawped and exhaled a wheezing whistle, four milky white eyes and tendrils that ran off its face to the cave floor.

What was called a Devourer. It had somehow escaped notice…was there a space in the ceiling it had found? There had been no word of this thing…you had no weapon, nothing that would harm this monster whatsoever…

Yet it did not pounce, or approach. It crawled to the other side of the tunnel, to the wall, slithered its way down. Sounds came out of its mouth, much like the other, heavily spoked, internally reverberating singular syllables.

Maddalyn pulled you to the side- she was slipping the both of you back, and you kept your face to it like you were confronting an uncertain predator.

The thing spoke again, but this time…it sounded strangely familiar.

“Maddalyn,” you said lowly, “Did this giant catfish just speak Old Vitelian?”

“Shh,” she urged you to the side.

“ART…THOU…CHIL…DREN…OF…REIK..?” It said in heavy rumbles.

“Maddalyn,” you repeated, “It speaks New Nauk…”

“Who cares?” Maddalyn hissed in your ear, “We need to run back! Before it does something…it’s trying to be distracting. What in the world would you want to speak with it about anyways? Let’s go..!”

>She was right. Time to go. This really was not what you wanted to find down here, and your curiosity was sated.
>Come on now. It didn’t seem hostile- if it could talk, maybe you could ask it things… (What do you want to try and speak to a monstrous subterranean mole catfish about?)
>Other?
>>
>>5375613
>She was right. Time to go. This really was not what you wanted to find down here, and your curiosity was sated.
>>
>>5375613
>Come on now. It didn’t seem hostile- if it could talk, maybe you could ask it things… (What do you want to try and speak to a monstrous subterranean mole catfish about?)
Why are you asking?
The original Reik is no more.
>>
>>5375613
+1 to >>5375689
>>
>>5375613
This really is fascinating, and it's tempting to learn more, but I REALLY do not want to suffer horrific injury or death to us or Maddy after we FINALLY just got married. Maybe if we get super magic powers we can use to defend ourselves far in the future we can come back and sate our curiosity.
>She was right. Time to go. This really was not what you wanted to find down here, and your curiosity was sated.
>>
>>5375613

>She was right. Time to go. This really was not what you wanted to find down here, and your curiosity was sated.
>>
>>5375613
>Come on now. It didn’t seem hostile- if it could talk, maybe you could ask it things… (What do you want to try and speak to a monstrous subterranean mole catfish about?)
Why is it here? Hopefully not for a meal, but you usually don't call out to things you are planning on eating.
>>
>>5375613
>She was right. Time to go. This really was not what you wanted to find down here, and your curiosity was sated.
>>
>>5375654
>>5375752
>>5375813
>>5375842
You are highly against getting catfished.

>>5375689
>>5375733
>>5375817
This thing would probably be good fried in cornmeal.

Writing.
>>
The appeal of this living curiosity gave you some small pause. After all, if it wanted to eat you, why would it wait? Why would it try to communicate by going through what languages it knew? More importantly, how did a giant catfish mole monster learn to speak different languages? It spoke to an intelligence deeper than you assumed…

…But the reward was not nearly worth the risk. Of all the things you expected to find down in this hole, this was not one of them you wanted, and your curiosity was now plenty sated.

“Right,” you said to Maddalyn, and darted upwards with her, the small familiarity with the hole helping guide you upwards better.
The creature did not follow you, at least, not at first, but you weren’t going to wait and see, to give it any chance to change its mind about eating you, and Maddalyn wasn’t interested in slowing down, either.

Maddalyn staggered to a stop once you were back in the church hall, falling to her knees and panting laboriously, until you picked her up and moved on.

“It shouldn’t…” Maddalyn coughed, “It won’t be able to fit through that door…the stone is too thick…”

“It talked, Maddalyn,” you said, in some reverence to the oddity, “I didn’t think…”

“They’re ancient creatures…but that it talks in our tongue means nothing. Plenty of dangerous things talk…”

You set her down once it was more clear that nothing would try and smash through the walls to come get you. “You know more languages than I do,” you said, “It sounded like Old Vitelian…do you know it?”

“Of course not,” Maddalyn sulked haughtily, “Nobody speaks it unless they’re pretending at past sophistication. It spoke a sort of mountain blood tongue, first. You’re going to ask what it said, I know. It was trying to ask what we were.”

“Children of the Reich, though?”

“From what I remember it saying,” Maddalyn brushed herself off as you put her down, “It said something similar for the other tongues. It associates people’s identity with the language they speak.”

“Alright,” you flashed the torch back, “But how does it learn to speak? Did somebody teach it?”

“I don’t know,” Maddalyn said, brushing her fingers through her hair to settle it, “Creatures of presence hardly need to be taught if they can mimic, consume. That Devourer could be hundreds of years old, there’s plenty of time where it could have…I don’t know. Eaten somebody and learned.”

That was an interesting concept…could something learn through consumption? Would an ancient creature like a Devourer, or whatever other names it had, become wise through eating, where it was once an idiot monster? Or did it always have such capacity for intelligence? Maddalyn probably wasn’t in a mood to discuss the creature you just escaped, though.

“We’re back,” you announced to the Sergeant as you exited the tunnel.
>>
“You look like you’ve exerted yourselves,” he said as he looked over you and your wife, “Was there something in there to be concerned about?”

“At ease, Sergeant,” Maddalyn said, “It won’t come out. It was some subterranean creature whose lair we found.”

He drew his pistol nevertheless. “Do you want it dispatched, my lady?”

“No,” Maddalyn waved a hand, “That would not be powerful enough to kill it anyways. Let us just be on our way…after we look at these shrines.”

Said shrines were actually newer than the church within the tunnel- something that Maddalyn managed to notice when scrounging around the stones at their base. There were signatures and scrawling by the people who built them- even if the shrines had fallen since.

“Luigi D’Apicio,” Maddalyn pointed to badly faded words notched into the bricks, “A Vitelian Empire expedition. The date scribed is from only ten years before the Dheg. I suppose they set these up, and they were knocked down by the western invaders?”

The Dheg were foreign pagans at the time, yes, from what you had re-read. They were converted to Holy Judgment after they settled in the west of Vinstraga, and especially when the Western Maelstrom cut away their homeland and communication with it, but in their initial invasion they would have shown little respect for the Cathedra’s authority.

The Sergeant still kept watch on the tunnel mouth as you and Maddalyn calmed down by poking about the shrines, similarly long plundered of anything of value, save for their history. Though looking about them, you guessed that they weren’t all shrines- some must have been housing or for some other purpose, though why they wouldn’t stay in the cavern…

Well, you supposed you found out why.

A brief lunch was had, with rations and water packed along the way. A camp stove was set up to heat water for tea, before the journey back down began. A far easier journey for all involved.

Along the way, you decided to test Maddalyn’s willingness to talk about the odder details of what you found.

“It can learn by eating things, then?” you asked Maddalyn, a bit ahead of your guards. “I know an ember…is supposed to copy things, you said, but that Devourer eats things?”

“It could, maybe, I don’t know,” Maddalyn said, “It’s because it’s a creature of presence, more than of flesh. Presence creatures are more able to take in being, if that makes sense.”

“So if I eat you some more,” you teased Maddalyn, “Will I learn a new language?”

A light kick to your shin was your just reward for that remark.

-----

The day wasn’t over by the time you got back- though Maddalyn was quite tired. A little urging got her on a path to another destination in the mountains, one that you could take a slower pace to, if you didn’t mind coming back in the dark. The hot springs- popular for bathing, though enough out of the way to not expect any company in the pools.
>>
A bit of further convincing was required for Maddalyn still going on, and admittedly, by the time you reached the place, you were very ready to relax in the misty mineral waters.

Your guards would have to be out of sight…and hearing. You’d blow a whistle if you needed them, but the locals kept vigilant patrols for any brigands- the mountains were quite safe and self-sufficient, to their pride, and ranging Kalleans avoided interfering with the lives of mountainfolk.

The hot springs themselves were ringed with large, smooth black stones, all damp from the steam and mist rising up, encrusted with accumulated minerals from the springs surrounding them. Boxes and stone slab shelves fixed into the ground were ready to accept clothing. The springs, after all, were meant to be entered completely in the nude, both as a matter of tradition and that the mineral water would likely not be kind to any dyes or delicate cloth.

“What are those little statues?” you asked Maddalyn regarding little abstract spear holders around the pools, whose heads were candles in various states of disrepair.

“Guardians to keep away ill-meaning spirits,” she explained, “the candles tend to be scented with substances good for keeping them away.”

“Do they work?”

Maddalyn shrugged. “Not for anything small. It’s supposed to be unpleasant for big things, but those are so rare that they’re not around anyways. Not in the sun.”

A sun that was dipping below the horizon, a sunset casting the mountain in reds and oranges. You undressed yourself, and looked to Maddalyn.

“…Your camisole has to come off too,” you said.

She clutched onto it modestly. “Does it..? I don’t want you to…” She looked away, “I don’t want you to look.”

Maddalyn was your wife. Why couldn’t you look at her breasts? “I won’t peek,” you said, “I’ll be waiting.”

You slipped into the hot water, and felt an instant wave of relief- something in the water tingled on your skin, and the warmth pulled all the strain of the day out of the muscles. You wanted to melt into the water itself, to sink in, and vanish…but the sunset was lovely too, especially in the mist, glowing with its warm light. Heavenly.

Maddalyn joined you, one arm carefully covering her chest (it was very easy for her to hide everything, of course) as she slipped in beside you, and sighed, sinking nearly to her nose until you rushed to buoy her around her waist.

She stayed limp, sighing with each breath. “I didn’t know how much my legs hurt just now…” She leaned her head on you, “Hmmmnnn…Richter…”

“Yes?”

“Touch me..?”

>A massage was only appropriate. Anything more was…untoward here, even if you were both naked. Even if nobody else was around.
>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
>Nobody was here, nobody would interrupt you. She was relaxed- and you hadn’t done it yesterday, so why not take her here?
>Other?
>>
>>5376011
>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
If the lady insists.
>>
>>5376011
>A massage was only appropriate. Anything more was…untoward here, even if you were both naked. Even if nobody else was around.
>>
>>5376011
>>Other
All three of the above, in order.
>>
>>5376011
>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
>>
>>5376011
>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
>Other?
Later, when we do find a patrolling Person of (green) Colour, let's have Maddy ask them where we can get some of the local brew. I want to get a bottle or two of something for Richter and Maddalyn to celebrate the honeymoon with and one for our dear Barny in-law. We'll doubtless never be able to get that exact same mountain wine he enjoyed in his youth, like he said, but we can at least extend the courtesy and bring him something back to kindle the memory.
Also also, OOC now, as you mentioned, in relation to the as-of-yet unnamed Sergeant of the guardsmen and his uplifting by Bastian, in his years of service to the household, has the Sergeant always been assigned to protect Maddalyn specifically, or is his time spent safeguarding divvied up between the other housebound family members as circumstance allows?
Are we allowed to know how long he'd served the Von Blums, or must be find the opportunity to ask him in-character?
Will Richter get to choose/be assigned a personal guard of his own eventually after the real marital paperwork is fully ironed out out or is a lower status husband expected to rely on the same guard as is assigned his wife?
>>
>>5376011
>>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
>>
>>5376011
>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
>>
>>5376011
>Heavy petting was in order. You needed to pick up some Vitelian somehow, after all.
Get 'em Richter
>>
>>5376173
+1, she seems to be asking for it
>>
>>5376020
>>5376217
>>5376223
>>5376383
>>5376411
>>5376445
Time to be certain Maddy gets something she hasn't gotten in a bit.

>>5376161
No need to make this lewd.

>>5376173
>>5376510
Segs.

Writing.

>>5376223
>Also also, OOC now, as you mentioned, in relation to the as-of-yet unnamed Sergeant of the guardsmen and his uplifting by Bastian, in his years of service to the household, has the Sergeant always been assigned to protect Maddalyn specifically, or is his time spent safeguarding divvied up between the other housebound family members as circumstance allows?
The Household Guards are responsible for the whole family- though not on a constant or per-person basis. As of recent though, recent since "Maddalyn was returned home from being abducted," he has been part of her particular protection detail.

>Are we allowed to know how long he'd served the Von Blums, or must be find the opportunity to ask him in-character?
Nah, you can know. Eight years. Presumably it would have come up at some time.

>Will Richter get to choose/be assigned a personal guard of his own eventually after the real marital paperwork is fully ironed out out or is a lower status husband expected to rely on the same guard as is assigned his wife?
It could be requested- but really, you're supposed to protect yourself. Maddalyn is Von Tracht-Blum, but you are not Blum-Von Tracht by extension.
Besides, you already have a person assigned to be your personal retainer, though your wife does not particularly approve.
>>
Oh, you’d touch her.

“Ah!” Maddalyn cried when you swept her up in your arms and set her on your lap, both her arms crossed over her chest, “T-though…not…”

“It’s alright,” you told her as your left hand fondled her thighs, “I only want you to feel good right now.”

Maddalyn frowned, and looked down. “Is that…alright?”

“Of course it is,” you found her opening and pushed a finger slowly in, “Now…” you bent forward and locked your lips with hers.

She kissed you back, only pulling back to catch her breath, while you touched her deeply, felt all around in her, until, her face flushed and her eyes half closed, you raised her up onto a flat stone on the side of the spring.

“Hmm?” She swayed, dazed, but kept her arms tight across her chest, as you spread her legs.

“I told you,” you said as you pushed your face in between her thighs, “I need to learn Vitelian somehow…” You ran your tongue across her, tasted the spring water running off her body, that shone in the sunset, wet all over.

As you kissed her there, pushed your tongue up against the whole of her sex and were apparently doing well enough to need nothing more than the softest instruction, you had a thought cross your mind. She didn’t act like she did when you went through foreplay before, when you properly made love. She was so tense then, she didn’t relax like she did now. It felt like you were wasting time, even though you weren’t doing anything different then or now that she’d been satisfied with before, only that you weren’t putting your member inside of her.

This time, though, for the first time in some days, she came. The familiar gasping, then her quivering, her twitching below, as you gave her no mercy and she covered her mouth and suppressed her cry of orgasm, before softly pressing you away when her convulsions were tamed.

“Th…thank you…” she said in a cracking voice as you pulled her gently back down into the spring, slipping her slowly in without a splash.

“It is my pleasure to service my lady,” you said, “Though I haven’t seemed to have picked up any Vitelian…”

“Richter…” Maddalyn gazed at you with an unsettled half-lidded glance, as she touched you down below, “It’s alright, if you want to…”

“No, I’m fine,” you said, stroking her hair, “That was for you, not for me. We don’t have to spend every moment having sex.”

“Yes, but…” Maddalyn sighed and sank to her chin. “I don’t mind it…I’m alright with you finishing quickly.”

“Well, I’m not,” you said, “I want it to be good for you like now. I don’t want to force you. It feels like I’ve been, somehow.”
>>
“Isn’t it alright that it ends sooner then?” Maddalyn asked quietly, sidling closer, “I…the feeling isn’t as important as the deed. If you want to, then you should. After all…a wife should enjoy making love to her husband…”

“I enjoy making love to you.”

Maddalyn put a hand on your cheek. “I know. I love that, but…”

It had only been a day- maybe she anticipated the next day and night being the same. You comforted her still. “Don’t worry about that,” you pointed to the sunset, “Do the gales look…beautiful?”

“In their way…” Maddalyn said, her melancholy not fading, “They do…”

Like the branches of a tree, she said. You wondered what it would be like, if both of what you saw was combined…

Would your children see that two as one?

-----

By the time you and Maddalyn got back to the village you were staying at, dark had fallen, an a night patrol of two men was about to go out, both with lanterns, though of differing colors, one a warm orange and the other a strange, pale white. Different fuel, probably. One had an old rifle, the other a handmade spear.

You had Maddalyn ask them for something special- something to take back, when your honeymoon was over.

“Mead?” Maddalyn confirmed with you.

“Of a special sort. Made from mountain honey and its herbs and fruits. To be specially given for another. Two kinds.”

Maddalyn spoke to the locals in Vitelian, and they answered readily. She turned back to you. “They say that the ingredients for that are meant to be found by you, if you’re the person giving the gift. At least, you’re supposed to find the infusions.”

That was doable. After all, the next morning, you planned to go on a hunt. For what though, with what, and whom…was another story.

>Only take Maddalyn along. You hardly needed bodyguards for whatever mountain wildlife there was.
>Find a local guide to take you and Maddalyn. Despite your confidence in the wild, you had only been in these mountains a day…
>Bring you and Maddalyn’s bodyguards along. If anything dangerous appeared, you’d have sufficient force to take it down.
>Other?
Also-
>Borrow a rifle to hunt with. That way nothing would be too large or strong. You’d equip yourself as best as you could.
>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
>Bring a spear and a knife. You wanted to get close and bloody for this- and being on the same slope meant you wouldn’t be far, anyways.
>Other? They have to be things that the locals actually have…or that you brought.
And-
>What sort of forage do you want to select for “your” meads? A general sort of feel- you’re not an experienced brewer, after all, and your selection is more important symbolically than flavorwise…
>>
>>5376617
>Find a local guide to take you and Maddalyn. Despite your confidence in the wild, you had only been in these mountains a day…
>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
>>
>>5376635
+1
>>
>>5376617
>>Only take Maddalyn along. You hardly needed bodyguards for whatever mountain wildlife there was.
>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
>>
>>5376617
>>Find a local guide to take you and Maddalyn. Despite your confidence in the wild, you had only been in these mountains a day…
>>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
>>
>>5376617
>Find a local guide to take you and Maddalyn. Despite your confidence in the wild, you had only been in these mountains a day…
>Borrow a rifle to hunt with. That way nothing would be too large or strong. You’d equip yourself as best as you could.
>Mead (Make it sweet and fruity if possible)
>>
>>5376635
+1
I have no idea what would go in a mead
>>
As a heads up, won't be able to update until pretty late tonight, voting will be open until then.

>>5376773
>I have no idea what would go in a mead
Neither does Richter. The thought is the thing that counts- since it's meant to be something personalized.
>>
>>5376617
>>Find a local guide to take you and Maddalyn. Despite your confidence in the wild, you had only been in these mountains a day…
>>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
>>What sort of forage do you want to select for “your” meads?
Seconding the sweet and fruity idea so berries and stuff i guess
>>
>>5376617
>Find a local guide to take you and Maddalyn. Despite your confidence in the wild, you had only been in these mountains a day…
>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
>What sort of forage do you want to select for “your” meads?
Blueberries. Haven't tried blueberry mead myself, but apparently it begins with a sweet introductory taste and leaves a dry and tannic aftertaste.
>>
>>5376617
>Borrow the local preferred hunting weapon- a set of two crossbows, one to fire bolts for larger creatures, the other stones for small game and birds. They were quiet, and sufficient.
It don't trust our shooting skills too far and this way we don't scare off most game if the first few shots are misses.

>What sort of forage do you want to select for “your” meads? A general sort of feel- you’re not an experienced brewer, after all, and your selection is more important symbolically than flavorwise…
I like the symbolism of a small seed that grows into a big tree. Maybe it's a bit much to smack an acorn or pine cone into the brew, but maybe some pine needles could stand in for the tree symbolism?
>>
>>5376635
>>5376693
>>5376734
>>5376773
>>5376958
>>5377326
Locals and crossbows.

>>5376728
Just the two of you- and a pair of bows.

>>5376752
A guide and a rifle.

>>5376752
>>5376958
Sweet and fruity for a wife's sweet tooth.

>>5377326
The essence of a young tree for the path to growth and elder glory.

Writing.
>>
>>5377144
Also you with blueberries.
>>
Three particular tools would be most important for your hunt in the morning- the actual doing of it, not handling of success or the like, the knives set had no use in the kill itself. The first two were weapons- traditional, local sorts borrowed, a stone bow used for hunting small game and birds, able to utilize the plentiful pebbles of the peaks, and a more traditional bolt firing bow for large prey. You’d need to be closer to effectively use them than a firearm, but you didn’t have much confidence in your aim these days, and had no experience with crossbows, save for that these ones could be held much like a rifle.

The third tool was a local guide- despite the loss of your skill with weaponry, you had a wealth of hunting and survival knowledge, but still lacked particular knowledge of the local area. Something your experience told you could be more risky than some more prideful might assume. The mountains of Paelli were not the woods of Strossvald, and it wouldn’t be left to chance to discover just how wide the gap was.

She was the daughter of the patrol chief, eager to prove herself as a tomboyish young woman would. Barely an adult, Szara could be mistaken for a man with her cloak and masking on, but she had the hips of a mountain girl that left little to question for even the mildly observant, though her hair was a dusty brown of the less vibrant alternative to the green of most mountainfolk. More notable than any figure or hue of hair, though, was a curious ring within a ring mark on her face. You’d seen mountainfolk with patterns drawn on their faces- Fie came to mind, with a decorative circle of ink. This, however…was a brand applied directly to her cheek. A declaration of betrothal to one of the clan men, apparently, but brands could form any oath of loyalty that were meant to be considered inviolable.
Maddalyn and you were introduced to her at the same time- though Szara knew no New Nauk whatsoever, Maddalyn could speak with her well enough.

“So this weapon fires stones?” Maddalyn hefted the stone bow- it was smaller and more appropriate for her to use, but you did not expect her to, rather than it being a matter of distributing weight.

“Yes, let me show you,” you demonstrated putting your foot in the stirrup and pulling the string with both hands to its catch, “It’s easy. Then you put a round stone in the leather strip here. It’s like a slingshot, but bigger. Try it.”

Maddalyn managed to pull the string back, uncertainly shoulder the stock, and with a TWACK and then a distant THWACK, struck an innocent boulder with a stream-smoothed stone.

“Hee,” she smiled, “I feel like a delinquent with this.” She wore locally-woven breeches like one- they hugged her bottom in a tantalizing manner just below the coat she wore, better clothes for hiking than yesterday, that had been newly acquired. “Would it,” she examined the stone bow, “Would it kill a man..?”
>>
“…No,” you determined, “It’s not strong enough. It’d hurt like hell, depending on where you hit, but one of those is meant to shoot birds and rabbits at best. Things with less dense flesh and bone.”

“Hm,” Maddalyn looked down at the stone bow, than rattled the bag of stones. Something seemed to be growing in her mind, but it was interrupted by Szara rattling off something in mountain-tinged Vitelian. Maddalyn responded with her own, far more cultured sounding accent, with a roll in some consonants that was…proving a reaction in your trousers.

“What did she ask?” you asked yourself, mostly as a distraction.

“Ah,” Maddalyn looked up at you, “She wanted to know why I was being taken along. I just told her we wanted to be together, because we are husband and wife.” Szara said something more. “She’s eager to be married, herself. Two weeks, once her fiancé comes down from the north.”

“Congratulations,” you bowed at your shoulders to the mountain girl.

There might be a further reason you brought Maddalyn, though. When you had helped slay the Lord of the Forest, your loader, Jorgen, had suggested that taking such a mighty creature and drinking a great quantity of its blood would grant a woman a strong child- he’d believed in such and its importance so that he had, without being joking, he claimed, had suggested that if your retinue had been around that you should have her drink the Thornbrush’s blood and then “put a baby in her” on that very spot and moment.

Here was far more ideal circumstances for that sort of ritual, especially considering who would be the receiver of blood and babe. Should you find something so grand. And succeed.
>>
Szara led you both to the hunting grounds of the local tribes- as your courtesy for hunting for pleasure, any kill you took would have most of its parts donated to the locals, to use every little bit of, though it was only fair for the hunter to have a reasonable cut from his kill, such as a pelt, or horns, or particular share of meat. The mountain girl made the procedure of the hunt clear- she would aid in finding anything, though you considered yourself quite good at tracking, and you or Maddalyn would take your shots. If anything proved aggressive, she seemed confident in being able to fend off most things with a hefty-shafted winged spear, and an old looking, large bored black powder revolving pistol. A local was also quite helpful in locating the forage you wanted to get for the mead you wanted to make- one for Maddalyn, another for her father. The former felt easy to pick for- her sweet tooth demanded sweet berries. As for Lord Von Blum…something more symbolic, though you’d want to peck through a few options to find something right before hastily reaching a decision.

Maddalyn’s eyes too, you realized as you saw her gaze darting around, would be quite helpful in detecting prey as well. To her, anything animal glowed particularly brightly, after all…

>Roll 3 sets of 1d6 for your hunting expedition. +1 bonus for having local aid.
>1-3 is small game like birds and marmots, 4-5 is bigger game like boars and goats, while a 6 is something rather great- though you can only get one 6 creature, multiple 6s will merely increase its splendor.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d6)

>>5377599
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5377599
>>
Rolled 3 (1d6)

>>5377599
Come on something fun!
>>
>>5377608
>>5377613
>>5377621
Nothing special, though maybe that's for the better?
Anyways, give me d100s. One roll under 70 for the small game, and two roll under 45s for the mediums.
I'll get it and update in the morning.
>>
Rolled 29 (1d100)

>>5377624
>>
Rolled 17 (1d100)

>>5377624
>>
Rolled 86 (1d100)

>>5377624
>>
If I knew we were out here looking for something grand to do the "blessing the child" thing, I would have voted for the rifle, a crossbow seems entirely insufficient for hunting such a thing. Good thing I guess we didn't get a 6?

>>5377596
>The next female we interact with is yet another tomboy
At least this one has a fiance and what looks to be a decent life. Anyways, when is the quest getting renamed to Tomboy Commander?
>>
>>5377624
On the topic of mossheads, where on Vinstraga are the biggest minorities found?
>>
>>5377693
>when is the quest getting renamed to Tomboy Commander?
That's just when it's Anya perspective.

>>5377694
>where on Vinstraga are the biggest minorities found?
That sort of depends on how one classifies them, whether they're nation specific, or of a particular wide-spread race. Kallec has proportionally the largest amount of mountainfolk or mountainfolk-descended people, Naukland holds the forests the Yaegir call home so that's where most of them are, though they don't make up a particularly large subset of the population. Vyemani aren't particularly populous anywhere, though their nomadic lifestyle means they can be found all over the continent.
Nationally speaking Dhegyar are found in a pretty huge clump in the Reich, while Vynmark has a large population of Nauk who make up the majority of the upper and ruling class, on the other end of the Nauk spectrum there's the Netinauk of Netilland, who are a Nauk minority who are decidedly not of the aristocratic class. In Vitelia there's two rather distinct ethnicities, one of "coastal" Vitelians who are dusky skinned and darker haired, and another of more familiarly pale but less numerous "hill" Vitelians, but they've existed together long enough in harmony to not have much difference in societal status.
>>
The first encounter was with a few rock pheasants, not particularly intelligent birds, and easy prey even for somebody of meager aiming skills such as you, because of their defensive tactic of standing still and pretending to be the flint flecked hue as the rest of the rock around them. Something that didn’t work on any of you. The first was dispatched in a puff of feathers and a flop as you put a stone bullet right into its breast.

“Richter,” Maddalyn asked as you went up and picked up the pheasant, the other birds not moving a muscle, “Can I try something, if these birds don’t want to move?”

“…Sure,” you said, assuming she referred to shooting them, “Though if you miss too many times, they’ll probably scare.”

“No,” Maddalyn said, as she stuck her finger into the wound on the pheasant you picked up, “I won’t, not if this works.” She kept what she was doing hidden from both you and Szara, and when she hefted the stone bow from the same distance you’d been at, you frankly expected it to miss. However, when the stone was launched, despite it seeming off target, it seemed to move in the air to neatly crack the next bird right in its fragile skull, making it hop into the air and flip, before flopping on the ground. She gave you a smug look after, as though anticipating surprise.

What a fine ass that was in those tight breeches.

“Was that really a good idea,” you said lowly to her, looking around, so your eye was directed somewhere else than her backside, “I don’t know what you did, but…”

“It’s fine,” Maddalyn said, now defensive, “That was a good shot, wasn’t it?”

No need to be unkind. “It was.” You looked at the last of the three birds, “I suppose we should finish off that last one, should we? It’s so stupid, I could probably grab it with my hands.”

As you rose, though, Szara held out her hand and rattled off something long.

“What’d she say?” you asked Maddalyn.

“She said to leave the last one alone,” Maddalyn said, “If you kill all the stupid ones, the hunts in the future will be harder as the only ones left will be smart.”

“I see.” Though you weren’t sure how well that applied to instinctual camouflage tactics. “Two is enough, then. Let’s keep going.”

The next encounter, which was heard before it was seen, was a wild wooly goat that you managed to hit with the larger bolt bow, not through particularly good aim, but by creeping up on it when the wind was in your face, over the course of half an hour of steady hunching. When you couldn’t possibly miss, you shot the thing in the heart, feeling a sense of tickling pride on landing such a shot with a weapon you were unfamiliar with. Even if you were close enough that an actual practitioner with the weapon would consider it child’s play.

Though wasn’t the essence of tactics to manipulate the situation so that the actual conflict was simple and easy?
>>
Szara said something that sounded complimentary as you examined your kill, driving a knife into its neck to make sure it was finished.

“What?” you asked, looking to Maddalyn.

“She says you’re quite the hunter,” Maddalyn smiled. Szara said something else, and Maddalyn blushed, and replied something- there was some back and forth there, as you blinked quizzically.

“What is it now?”

“L-later,” Maddalyn stammered. You weren’t entirely unobservant- it must have been something lewd in nature. So long as Maddalyn agreed with whatever it was…

Unfortunately for you, the praise of “fine hunter” couldn’t be extended to the next one. A wild pig rooting about under stones seemed an easy target when you finally found it, but it dashed away from you in grunting hops like a rabbit whenever you came close. The frustration mounted- when Szara tittered something and Maddalyn said something along the lines of you being unlucky, you weren’t inclined to believe it for some reason.

So you stopped before the point the stupid hog had detected you before, and took a far shot. Its vision seemed poor, so you lined it up carefully…

…And merely stuck the bolt through an ear, a wound which caused the pig to squeal raucously and dart away in a jumping skip even more quickly.

“Szara says there’s no point now,” Maddalyn said, “It’s gotten away.”

The tomboy of the mountains said something further in a reverent voice.

“She says the Hophog is a cleverer and swifter beast than it might seem, and it foils most attempts to take it. There’s no shame in it escaping. That we’ve taken enough for the day.”

If it was cleverer than it seemed that meant it had been toying with you before- and it rang clear, with how slow its earlier retreats had been compared to this one.

>You weren’t about to be beaten by a stupid pig of all things. Stay out longer to try and kill it. You were resigned to eat that cocky little bastard.
>What a poor note to end on! But you’d find different prey. A little longer- just a bit. (One more encounter roll)
>She was right- and Maddalyn was probably tired. Go back and rest, you’d be heading somewhere different tomorrow.
>Other?
Also-
>You are owed one token from the hunt to claim. If you aren’t heading back out, you may choose something from your kills now.
>>
>>5378184
>She was right- and Maddalyn was probably tired. Go back and rest, you’d be heading somewhere different tomorrow.

>You are owed one token from the hunt to claim. If you aren’t heading back out, you may choose something from your kills now.

Take the goat horns, see if we can get them fashioned into cups for the mead.
>>
>>5378184
>What a poor note to end on! But you’d find different prey. A little longer- just a bit. (One more encounter roll)
Make the short stack drink blood!
>>
>>5378184
>What a poor note to end on! But you’d find different prey. A little longer- just a bit. (One more encounter roll)
Lets get this sit
>>
>>5378184
>Hophog
Sounds too agile, let's hunt Boghog next. They're nice and immobile, got a lotta meat even if they aren't too big.

>What a poor note to end on! But you’d find different prey. A little longer- just a bit. (One more encounter roll)
>>
>>5378184
>She was right- and Maddalyn was probably tired. Go back and rest, you’d be heading somewhere different tomorrow.
I don't think the crossbow will be enough to take down anything that'll be worth having Maddy drink. And remember, these things can definitely fight back.
>>
>>5378184
>She was right- and Maddalyn was probably tired. Go back and rest, you’d be heading somewhere different tomorrow.

>You are owed one token from the hunt to claim. If you aren’t heading back out, you may choose something from your kills now.
>>5378220
Go for the horns.
>>
>>5378184
Supporting >>5378220
>>
Rolled 4 (1d6)

>>5378220
>>5378247
>>5378252
>>5378253
Call it here- and take the horns.

>>5378233
>>5378237
>>5378244
Give it just a bit more go.

Writing. Though let's see what your encounter might have been.
>>
The “hophog” would have to escape you for now- with an ear piercing to remember you by. A look back at Maddalyn told you she was looking somewhat pale- being less than physically fit, she tired easily, especially in this sort of ground. Otherwise, you’d liked to have hunted something else, if only to not finish on a poor note. That, and there was the hope of hunting something spectacular, to have her quaff a legend’s blood- though considering the choice of your weapon, you weren’t sure if you could kill such a thing.

Perhaps you just wanted to screw Maddalyn out in the wild, smeared with your kill, like a pair of tigers in mating season.

“She’s right,” you said with a sigh, “Let’s head back before dark. We have to help eat these, don’t we?”

Though as you spitefully remembered the hophog, you recalled its shape- suited for its rabbit-like hops, lightly dusted with white speckled wool. Its hindquarters were proportionally strengthened for its method of fleeing, making it more pear shaped than the average swine.

…Hm.

“Maddalyn,” you asked as you shrugged your shoulders and put the crossbow’s sling back over you, “Can you ask Szara if they have a local name for these “hop hogs,” maybe a slang one?”

Maddalyn did so, and Szara looked to you and said, “Porcacella.”

“Because it’s female,” Maddalyn said, addressing the suffix. Then she blinked, and squinted at you skeptically, frowning deeply and furrowing her brows, as though to speak without words on what she thought you might be thinking.

“Alright,” you said, trying to avoid that evil eye. “Just…wondering if we could find somebody who could sell any to eat.”

-----
>>
When you came back to the village, you helped butcher your catch of two pheasants and the goat- Maddalyn helped as well, and you were surprised by her lack of squeamishness as she drew knife across membrane, not caring as she dirtied an apron with blood, flecks of it spattered on her face, gloves soaked through. The claim for your kill seemed clear to you- the thick, upward-curved horns of the wooly mountain goat, not the heftiest potential drinking vessels, but enough to not look like drinking from wine flutes. Drinking horns seemed appropriate for the mead- and indeed, it was offered for a local craftsman to clean them for such a purpose. A decent souvenir, though not as grand as some other thing might have been.

“I liked going out with you today,” Maddalyn said as she sat in your lap, leaned against you, while strips of meat with turnips and wild onions threaded through with wild herbs were spit on sticks and roasted for you and a band of others, including a pair of mountain patrolmen about to go out for the night.

“I’ve had better hunts,” you said, thinking fondly to some good hits.

“I’ll see plenty,” Maddalyn put her hand on your cheek. “That mead with the berries you collected…is that for me?”

On your way back, you had sifted through some bushes and on the top of some rises and slight cliffs to find an array of mountain sweets, a broad blend with flavors you tested to have compliment one another, though not before ensuring with Szara that they weren’t poisonous. The resulting concoction of berries and flowers was to be put in the arm-length bottle full of honey wine you paid for with coin- held in by a mesh, like tea brewed, in order to dispense the flavors as much as possible. It’d probably be purple like wine, from the hue of the berries. Including some relative of blueberry that was somewhat softer and fatter, called wormberry, unappealingly, because of its tendency to be predated by moths.

“Once it’s done, yes,” you pet her head, “The other is for Lord Von Blum.” That had been prepared with picked young evergeen tips and sap. Hopefully he’d appreciate the tree symbolism, if not the taste itself.

“Hm,” Maddalyn curled herself tighter, “I think you would have done better for him in the mountains of the Imperial Gate, the northern ones in Delsau. That was where…mother was from.”
“These,” you reaffirmed, “Are to be tribute from me. I can’t recapture his past. I want to assure him of his future.”

Maddalyn shifted again, and leaned more fully against you. Said nothing.

Both of you were quite tired when you went to bed- despite being given private quarters, in recognition that you were wedded husband and wife, you both kept the night quiet. Lying down with Maddalyn breathing on your neck was a surefire way to bring you to dreams…

Dreams that were silent, for now.
>Unless you want them disturbed...
>Thank goodness for their dark quiet.

-----
>>
The next days as you left was to be bright and warm- an ideal time for the beach. Paelli’s sands were rumored to be especially beautiful on the western side of the country- where the seas were directly touched by the gales, and the sunset was rumored to be a swirling spectacular, like a painting muddled in the sky, though that may have also been just a rumor. Considering that you’d been in the mountains and the sunset had been lovely, though not particularly strange, you had your doubts, though the hue of the sands and water was hard to argue with for how universal such claims were.

Additionally, there were the fashions of the beach. Atom suits abounded in markets, but so did more modest wear, though it was ever tight to the body. The sort most whispered about, though, was a mysterious “SNS” Suit, which was said to be equal parts scandalous- and thus- astounding, though chatter refused to speak the secret of why, other than that it was completely different from the quickly shifting to passé atom, whose lightning strike on the fashion scene was not so impressive to the already spectacle minded Paellans- and the SNS was apparently designed more locally in Vitelia, and had a mystique about its origins.

The next day would be when you properly went to the beach, but Maddalyn said that she wanted to “surprise” you, as she would leave for the markets with her guards to browse…though you would have liked to have gone with her, and wondered about insisting, as you looked through the beach locations shown in tour guides…

>Insist on going with her. You wanted to pick out what she’d wear- she was blind, after all…
>Let her go, but make a suggestion to what you like- a hint for her to watch for. (What sort of hint? Anything from cut to color.)
>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
>Other?
Also, for a beach-
>The Hanescelli Resort, which shared a space with the Hanescelli Fortress, a coastal gun establishment that had little use during present times…letting all the local infrastructure be overrun with a resort for all-comers. A happening place.
>A quiet beachfront, where few would disturb you, and there’d be little but a local village and the seas. The hustle and bustle of a resort-fair was not to your preference, right now.
>Il Bordo Freddo was a curious beach town- the furthest west one could find a shore settlement. For it was as close to the Maelstrom as possible- and attracted strange sorts, and offered strange things to appeal to them…
>>
>>5378360
>Thank goodness for their dark quiet.
>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
>Il Bordo Freddo was a curious beach town- the furthest west one could find a shore settlement. For it was as close to the Maelstrom as possible- and attracted strange sorts, and offered strange things to appeal to them…
>>
>>5378359
>Unless you want them disturbed...
Still wanna talk to hell in the ghost dimension.

>>5378360
>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
Don't disappoint us, darling.
>Il Bordo Freddo was a curious beach town- the furthest west one could find a shore settlement. For it was as close to the Maelstrom as possible- and attracted strange sorts, and offered strange things to appeal to them…
Weirdo beach!
>>
>>5378360
>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
>Il Bordo Freddo was a curious beach town- the furthest west one could find a shore settlement. For it was as close to the Maelstrom as possible- and attracted strange sorts, and offered strange things to appeal to them…
>>
>>5378359
>Thank goodness for their dark quiet.

>>5378360
>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
>A quiet beachfront, where few would disturb you, and there’d be little but a local village and the seas. The hustle and bustle of a resort-fair was not to your preference, right now.
>>
>>5378360
>>Thank goodness for their dark quiet.
>>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
>>Il Bordo Freddo was a curious beach town- the furthest west one could find a shore settlement. For it was as close to the Maelstrom as possible- and attracted strange sorts, and offered strange things to appeal to them…
These all sound really good but we can't pass up the opportunity to go for a nice swim in the maelstrom.
>>
>>5378377
>>5378489
>>5378530
>>5378689
Let your wife surprise you- and go to the edge of the world.

>>5378456
Try and go beyond.

Writing. It's a bit funny to me where the boundary to the funky stuff seems to be drawn here for most, just a thought.
>>
>>5378359
>Unless you want them disturbed...
OO WA A A A
>>5378360
>You wanted to see how she’d surprise you- let it happen.
>Il Bordo Freddo was a curious beach town- the furthest west one could find a shore settlement. For it was as close to the Maelstrom as possible- and attracted strange sorts, and offered strange things to appeal to them…
Let's buy a crab net and eat yet more wildlife
>>
>>5378712
For what it's worth I count this anyways.
>>
Auto-update you scamp, you've tricked me once again
>>
>>5378700
Personally I'd rather stay away from most of the funky stuff, but going with the ghost dreams has had concrete and detrimental consequences, and we haven't yet been bitten by being too curious yet
>>
So be it, you had decided. You’d be surprised. Though what you could think to expect was a mystery- only that it’d be dark by the time she returned, as you’d stay in a rented cottage for the night before heading to the sea.

The beach itself was called Il Bordo Freddo- the cold edge, after its place next to the Iceforth Gale Maelstrom. The local temperature wasn’t actually cold, not at this time of year- and it wouldn’t be until winter again. No, right now, the clouds were in an aesthetic quantity, the sun was warm, and the sea breeze would be gentle, though even the air itself, rumor had it, would be touched by the Maelstrom.

What would it all look like to Maddalyn, you wondered.

You heard the door to the cabin open, and Maddalyn and her guards walked in, one holding the door open for your lady as the other watched outside, and remained there as the door closed. The Sergeant’s understudy, a man nicknamed Wiesel- an unkind sounding cognomen, but apparently one he selected himself- would be staying outside for the first watch, whilst the Sergeant would nap in the front entry’s chair until it was time for his watch. You and Maddalyn would have the rest of the small place to yourself.

Maddalyn had a long dress over herself, and a cloak- she smiled at you as she saw you reclining on the armchair, that would soon be given up to the Sergeant.

“I’m back,” she said, beckoning with a finger, “Come over, I want to show you something,” she then pointed her finger to the back- the bedroom.

“Of course,” you stood, saluted to the Sergeant as he passed, and he fell into the armchair with a rattling sigh. “Did you find something…surprising?”

Maddalyn’s smile turned to a mischievous smirk. “Oh, dearest, you haven’t the slightest idea.”

You didn’t know about that- your imagination was rather strong.

The bedroom was entered- and you shut the door behind Maddalyn. “Now,” Maddalyn said as she stepped in front of the bed and pointed down for you to sit, “I want you to take a brief vow of silence. For the next…ten minutes, perhaps. I want you to speak nothing. Yes?”

“Alright,” you shrugged.

“Shh,” Maddalyn put a finger to your lips, “Now close your eyes, and don’t open them until I say so.” You did. A shuffling of cloth onto the floor. “Hee hm. Okay. Open those eyes, and don’t forget- you can’t say anything.”

You opened them, and…
>>
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It was more conservative than you had anticipated, really. It seemed to be a one-piece swimsuit at first glance- with long pieces of fabric that tied around the arms and thighs, with abstract lined patterns on sections- she wore the waist chain you bought her over top.

“I know what you’re thinking,” Maddalyn said, adjusting a ribbon on her arm with a sly look, “That doesn’t look so surprising. You see, Richter, this is an SNS suit. Do you know what that stands for? It stands for Schiena Nuda Supremo. Which means…the Ultimate Backless.”
>>
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She turned around, and that was most certainly more surprising- because it looked like she was wearing nothing whatsoever from the back angle, only the ties on her legs and shoulders indicating she wasn’t completely naked.

“Guh-“

“Ah ah,” Maddalyn said, waving a finger, “You are to be quiet.” She assumed a bossy tone of voice, “Ultimate backless. Of course, I have a set of shorts to wear under this, and a different suit if that doesn’t work, for whatever reason. This manner of wearing it is only for you- and you will tell me now, what you think of it.” You opened your mouth, and she snapped coyly. “Ah! Shh. You are to tell your lady without speaking. Is that understood?”

>?
>>
>>5378824
Damn, Maddy has a sexy profile. That ponytail, mmhhh. Though it looks like her ear is stapled over her hair

>Buttcheek nuzzling time. Hope we're well-shaved.
>>
>>5378824
By the judge.
Don't speak? I'm near speechless as is!
It's beautiful. She's beautiful.
Richter really is lucky to have such a fantastic little wife.
Go forth lad, service your lady!
Time to play the role of the ass kissing consort.
>>
>>5378824
>>modern """fashion"""
>>
>>5378831
>Hope we're well-shaved.
Unfortunately we know she's smooth in the front, so I'm sure you have nothing to worry about.
The REAL question is if she had thought to empty herself out before getting Richter worked up like this.
We wouldn't want any accidents if he decided to be equally adventurous back there, if you know what I mean.
>>
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>>5378824
What a nice big empty space with no fabric to stain. I don't see a swim suit, I see dart board full of targets with a butt for a bullseye.
>Start from the top. Ears first, then down the shoulders and so on, to ponder the orbs. Then take a seat on the edge of the bed and have a shot at the some "gunnery practice" on her back while she stands there and belittles our family's finances or something.
>>5378836
A powerful statement indeed, coming from Mr A55 himself
I veto any butt stuff desu
>>
>>5378892
You may laugh now, but back in my day the name A55 was synonymous with high fashion in Vinstraga. Mine was the final word on haute couture, and designers, models, and celebrities alike hung on my arm in the hope that I would whisper my wisdom in their ears. But times are different, and now the plebeians fight with rats in the gutters over scraps of cloth which they mistake in their ignorance for fashion, and it makes me sick. Yes, things have changed, and my only regret is that I lived long enough to be forced to see it.
>>
>>5378892
+1, hopefully we can get some intimacy this honeymoon that she is able to enjoy.

>>5378824
These are really nice images of her face, she should make that face more often. On that note, maybe that's something we can tell her after this encounter, that she has a really nice smile that she should use more often.
>>
>>5378831
>>5378834
Playing kissass.

>>5378892
>>5378969
Practicing your aim. After some preamble.

Writing.

>>5378944
Some never stop being chic, in their eyes. Signore "A55" knew the difference between displaying an ass on a platter and dressing it up like a feast. So some say as they scoff at modern trends. However, Paelli's trends ever veer towards the most sensational, and the other coastal markets of Vitelia are distracted with war. If only there was time for a comeback.
>>
Without a word, you stood from the bed, and bent down to wrap your lips around Maddalyn’s ears, as standard- though as she hummed with glee, you moved down- to suck on her neck, then bite her shoulders, ran your hands down her waist and kissed her spine.

“Consort,” Maddalyn said, testing, “Where are you heading, hm?”

Your vow of silence was not up yet. You groped her butt, squeezed it, shifted it in your hands- then with brief contemplation- planted a kiss right on the bottom of her back before rubbing your cheek against a round eminence of perfect pearl.

“Hmph!” Maddayn harrumphed, “I thought you better than some back alley mutt. Though you did flatter me, having difficulty finding your favorite part of me…”

The flesh was the matter there- you didn’t go close to the forbidden place. No kisses there. Though you did molest her rear and toy with the ribbons crossing beneath it until you had a firmness between the legs.

Maddalyn was looking at you smugly when you stopped, sat back on the bed, and undid your trousers- shifting out the begging feeling within.

“Ohhh?” Maddalyn purred, tilting her hips, “What are you going to do with that, you upstart scamp?”

That dirty smile, the bedroom eyes, and how she stood with her hands on her hips wiggling her behind just within arm’s reach. It was easy to imagine doing everything to it, but you only used a hand, felt your manhood eager to be indulged after two days and nights of nothing.

“How perverse of you,” Maddalyn scolded as she made a show of licking her lips, “Pleasuring yourself to me? You’ll be punished for such a crass display to your lady, I hope you know.”

You quickened your pace, and Maddalyn played along, with a cultured court accent, accusing and indignantly teasing.

“I ought to be insulted. You’re taking so long, do you truly wish to ravish me? Hurry up. Are you thinking of somebody else?”

With that, you grunted, your vision blurred for a moment, and a spurting rope of seed shot out and slapped across Maddalyn’s lower back, quickly followed by a barrage that splattered down over her bottom and dripped down her thighs. You admired the result- like a cake coated with slick decorative glaze- before you fell backwards and gasped for breath.
>>
As you tried to collect yourself and your nethers twitched in fading senselessness, Maddalyn didn’t let you just get off. She crawled onto the bed and knelt on your shoulders.

“Look at this mess you’ve made,” she scolded, pouting, “I hope you’re ready to make amends, you low blooded scoundrel.” She set her crotch against your face, and you kissed her through the cloth of the “swimsuit,” licked her ravenously, insisted against the cloth until Maddalyn pulled it aside and you got a direct taste of her moistening slit, the nub atop, all of it was lavished with kisses and licks, each one pressed more firmly and wetly than before. The smell with every breath, the taste with every push with your lips, the softness of her bottom of you and the cooing mocking encouraging above you, it made your member stand at attention quickly, then become painfully erect, awake and hyperaware. Your awareness was animalistic- Maddalyn’s role-play fading with your effort.

Unexpectedly, as Maddalyn’s breath shortened, she rose from smothering you and tilted your chin back with her finger. “Enough lapping and licking, dog,” she said with a pant, “I know you are a man…” She rose off of you, and beckoned with her finger, “Stand.”

You stood up straight, part of you wagging appropriately, as Maddalyn bent over the bed and curved her back down, resting her chin on the back of her hand. “Surely you did not spend everything on my back? You wouldn’t disappoint a lady by not having anything for inside of me, would you?”

That was all the encouragement you needed as you took hold of her hips.

>Roll a single 1d10
>>
Rolled 1 (1d10)

>>5379256
This time for real
>>
Rolled 10 (1d10)

>>5379256
>>
Rolled 2 (1d2)

>>5379259
>>5379260
You know for this to happen again is incredible.
However, in recognition of this-
I will be merciful.
Fate will decide whether you're the weak link this time.
>>
As soon as you pushed into her- you felt her heat, her wetness, tight, accepting, like she’d never been before, and Maddalyn let out a soft “Ahnn,” as you pressed on, and on…

You felt like you were about to explode right then- and you felt a blissful, if regretful, contraction.

Yet you held it together. Not yet, you told yourself as you grit your teeth and stayed, head pounding, nethers screaming for blissful release, not yet. Not until you felt her climax, at least.
Slowly, you let yourself move back, then pressed forth, bent over Maddalyn and wrapped your arms around her, nibbled on her ear as you did her. The iron down below, nearly hot to melting, managed to cool, and crystallize. You made it- and you breathed a small sigh of relief.

It took some minutes, even though she was already aroused- then, you felt it happen. Your wife’s breath quickened, deepened, she clasped a hand over her mouth as she began to make cute little squeals and yips…then, she tensed, you felt her from within, you felt every bit of pleasure you were giving her- then she went limp.

Yet you were ready for more. So more you did, and Maddalyn lay limp beneath you, softly moaning as you licked her ears, a wet smack for every time your hips pushed into hers. Until…she came again. This time, you could bear it no longer, and felt every bit of your spirit and essence squeezed out of you in a blinding fit, that left her curled beneath you as you both lay in the bed.
Maddalyn breathed deep, gasping breaths, and she failed to summon any words- she groped for your hand, and found it, and held it. Turned her head, and let you kiss her.

“J-Judge above…” Maddalyn finally managed to say. You had broken her character.

“I…almost blew it early again.”

“I thought you did too…”

You touched her, and realized she was still wearing the SNS suit. You idly wondered if your strength had come from how she was wearing a swimsuit, no matter how little of it showed from the back. “I suppose this needs a wash, doesn’t it.”

“I wasn’t going to wear it anyways,” Maddalyn panted, “Not without a pair of shorts…would you like me to? I have another…a more traditional white one…unless you want to dirty up that one too…”

>Dirty up that one too.
>You’d like the SNS suit- with the shorts. It had a certain fashion to it, after all, besides the outrageous reverse.
>You’d like her to wear the white one piece. She would look good in anything- but you wanted her modest.
>Suggest another suit you’d like better. (?)
>She should wear the SNS Suit- as she did just now.
>Other?
>>
>>5379268
>>You’d like her to wear the white one piece. She would look good in anything- but you wanted her modest.
Let's try to represent ourselves as the civilized Strossvalders we are and keep the hedonistic savage westerner roleplay confined to the bedroom, shall we?
>>
>>5379268
>You’d like her to wear the white one piece. She would look good in anything- but you wanted her modest.
Doesn't she know whit swimsuits turn transparent? Or is she not intending to swim?
>>
>>5379268
>You’d like her to wear the white one piece. She would look good in anything- but you wanted her modest.
>>
>>5379268
>You’d like her to wear the white one piece. She would look good in anything- but you wanted her modest.
It's surprising how often it is when people say something confident when they roll and then roll very poorly.
>>
>>5379268
>You’d like the SNS suit- with the shorts. It had a certain fashion to it, after all, besides the outrageous reverse.
>>
>>5379268
>You’d like her to wear the white one piece. She would look good in anything- but you wanted her modest.
Go with the classic and keep the SNS suit in the unmentionables drawer for Richter's eyes only. We wouldn't want her wearing out such a useful piece of equipment early.
>>
>>5379280
>>5379282
>>5379297
>>5379361
>>5379576
The lily white.

>>5379433
Modesty shorts.

Writing.
>>
“You would look good in anything,” you told your red haired darling, “But I’d like that white one piece the best. It’d be better to be modest Strossvalders out there…and keep all this in here.” Besides, the SNS suit had plenty of use besides public fashion- if you had your way this would be far from the only time you would screw her senseless in that garb.

“Mm.”

“Although,” you knew something about that particular material. “A white swimsuit? Do you know what happens to white fabrics when they get wet?”

Maddalyn was silent. Of course she didn’t know. She couldn’t see.

“It turns translucent,” you said, forcing down the question of if she was finally going to let you see her little breasts, “Are you not planning on swimming?”

“…No,” Maddalyn said, “I wasn’t. Maybe up to my ankles. I’m…afraid of drowning. I don’t like being cold and wet.”

“Oh,” you stroked her hair, her cheek, “I see.”

“I still want to be in the sun, the ocean air. Just not deep in the water…”

You pondered your performance, what had just happened, while you held Maddalyn. It had taken five times, but finally, you’d managed to make love to her in a way that felt proper for both of you. Despite any role play or uniform. “I liked your smile you had on. The expression you had,” you said as you stroked Maddalyn’s nude back, felt a sticky patch where sweat had mixed with emission, and cared not. “You ought to wear such a face more often.”

“Richter…”

“You have a lovely smile. I want to see it as much as I can.”

“Thank you…Richter, dearest,” Maddalyn hung her arms around your neck, “While I had that look, though…do you…like being treated in that manner? Every other time, you finished so quickly…” She held you tighter, and her tone turned doubtful, “Or…do you like it less…and that’s why the other times…”

“Maddalyn,” you breathed as you stroked her hair, “Don’t overthink it. You feel good. That’s all. I wanted to please you that time. You don’t have any trouble with pleasing me.” If you had ejaculated near immediately upon putting it in her again, after all that effort and building up, you might have stoved your head in against the corner of the building beating your skull against it. Especially thinking about how Maddalyn would reassure you and tell you how much a compliment it was, if one thought about it. “You don’t like it when I bust right away, do you?”
>>
She frowned sadly, as she looked into your eyes. “My body doesn’t…but my heart does. It makes me feel good, very good, just in another way.”

“Don’t you feel good in your heart right now?”

Maddalyn’s breaths were still deep, but were slowing. “I do…I do but I don’t know if it’s…right. If you didn’t like it…”

You gave her a deep kiss on the mouth, and she returned it meekly. “I loved it, as I love you. I’m trying to conceive a child with you, I can’t be disappointed. Not by you.”

“Hmm…” She lay in your arms, but she still sounded so awfully doubtful.

-----

The next day, you arrived at Il Bordo Freddo- a spread out coastal town with different sections for several separate industries, quite large for what it was. Obviously, tourism had cropped up, but salt drying was still present- and though the fishermen had moved to a different nearby settlement, the necessities of fishing meaning it could not coexist with a beach resort (especially, you’d read, concerning the production of a fermented fish condiment popular in Vitelia), there was still some small piers that had been populated with pleasure yachts and launches, racks of dinghies on the short.

The true spectacle was not anything built or placed on the beach, though. It was the land, the water itself.

The Vitemare Sea had a reputation for being gentler, and the waves obeyed that notion, but each band was a subtly different shade of blue, tinted with purple, orange, even silver, the foam glittering like sugar crystals. It reflected the sky, but changed it, so wherever the water was still it showed a night sky sparkling above. The sand was glittering white, with speckling and sometimes whole bands of color sweeping over it, demarcations of tides showing different sorts of colored bands. Compared to the ocean elsewhere, here was like a mad painter’s hallucination had taken hold, even the clouds reflected the rainbow of the sea, their undersides having light shows play across them. The smell of sea spray came up- and rather than salt, it was tart like citrus and sugar, and lingered with rosemary.

Two sections of the beach had scorch-white natural formations piled up around alcoves- ideal for any…privacy. Besides such a coincidence, they had their own stark beauty, as places where the elements had worn down and broken them revealed bands of soft color variation within, like chipped opals.
>>
You and Maddalyn had arrived in lounge wear, an open light jacket and short deep-blue briefs (and mask, of course) on you, and your wife in a modest but well crafted white swimsuit, with a pearlescent inlaid pattern on it of sea lotuses, that matched the chain around her waist well. She wore an identically hued loose silk wrap-skirt around her hips, in the local style, and it fluttered in the soft breeze. You carried her white parasol and a basket with towels and trifles for her. The Sergeant and Wiesel stayed in stuffy plain clothes- swimwear was not ideal for hiding weapons in.

When you looked to your wife, you could already tell she was spellbound.

“It’s…” she whispered, “It’s like nothing I could imagine…”

You squeezed her around her waist. “A happy accident, we can call it.” It wasn’t like anything you’d seen, either. The mountains had mysterious, mystique majesty, but the seas seemed to feel the touch of the planet’s Presence in an entirely different way.

“It’s wondrous,” Maddalyn’s voice was still awestruck, and she checked her handbag, “I’m glad I took these along.” In said handbag were an array of various discrete tools and notations for her…studies. It was not often one could get this close to a Maelstrom while also being on an innocent holiday, after all.

First was to set up your camp, of course, but then, you could go on with enjoying yourselves here until the sun set…

>One of the opal-stone alcoves. You had plans for such privacy, at sunset…
>Near the local vendors for food and drink. Nothing would work up a hunger and thirst like a good beach walk.
>A sunny spot on the beach, without obstructions- so Maddaln could sunbathe properly. Hopefully not to tan, though. If she even could.
>Other?
And-
>Take a boat out on the sea. Experience those strange waters for yourself- though you were no proficient swimmer and Maddalyn couldn’t swim, so you’d need a guardsman there…
>Walk down the beach, look for oddities. Shells and souvenirs. Do some studies like Maddalyn wanted.
>Go to the small fair by the beach first. Experience some local culture before the nature.
>Other?
>>
>>5379820
>Near the local vendors for food and drink. Nothing would work up a hunger and thirst like a good beach walk.
>Walk down the beach, look for oddities. Shells and souvenirs. Do some studies like Maddalyn wanted.
>>
>>5379820
>>Near the local vendors for food and drink. Nothing would work up a hunger and thirst like a good beach walk.
>>Walk down the beach, look for oddities. Shells and souvenirs. Do some studies like Maddalyn wanted.
>>
>>5379820
>>Near the local vendors for food and drink. Nothing would work up a hunger and thirst like a good beach walk.
>Go to the small fair by the beach first. Experience some local culture before the nature.
>>
>>5379820
>>Near the local vendors for food and drink. Nothing would work up a hunger and thirst like a good beach walk.
>>Walk down the beach, look for oddities. Shells and souvenirs. Do some studies like Maddalyn wanted.
>>
>>5379820
>A sunny spot on the beach, without obstructions- so Maddaln could sunbathe properly. Hopefully not to tan, though. If she even could.
>Take a boat out on the sea. Experience those strange waters for yourself- though you were no proficient swimmer and Maddalyn couldn’t swim, so you’d need a guardsman there…
>>
>>5379820
>>One of the opal-stone alcoves. You had plans for such privacy, at sunset…
>Go to the small fair by the beach first. Experience some local culture before the nature.
>>
>>5379820
>One of the opal-stone alcoves. You had plans for such privacy, at sunset…
Though if we don't end up setting camp there, perhaps we can make an excursion there as part of another "walk" or something.
>Walk down the beach, look for oddities. Shells and souvenirs. Do some studies like Maddalyn wanted.
>>
>>5379820
>>Near the local vendors for food and drink. Nothing would work up a hunger and thirst like a good beach walk.
>>Walk down the beach, look for oddities. Shells and souvenirs. Do some studies like Maddalyn wanted.

>Other
Maybe we can get a painting or coloured photo of the sea as a souvenir, the view sounds like something to take back with us
>>
>>5379831
>>5379852
>>5379884
>>5379987
>>5380094
Stick near the feasting place.

>>5379990
Go for the sunniest place.

>>5380001
>>5380031
Find a private place. To do private things in later.

>>5379831
>>5379852
>>5379987
>>5380031
>>5380094
Take a walk down the beach.

>>5379884
>>5380001
Go to the seaside fair.

>>5380001
Take a boat out.

>>5380094
Find some sort of visual reminder to take back.

Writing.
>>
Everything was set down and rolled out on a patch of white sand nearby a strip of local vendors, who had an array of different offerings, with the local norms being supplements by other cultural sustenance by a surprisingly diverse array of people. The place must have drawn seekers of the strange from all over Vinstraga- as you saw some signage in New Nauk, a language spoken on the opposite end of the continent. The place would make a good, relaxing hangout to punctuate a walk on the beach with.

Your guards were left with your things- the guides with information on this place suggested that there was hardly any violent crime, unlike in Paellan densely packed cities. The thing to watch out more for here was getting scammed into buying garbage for far higher prices than normal, which sounded completely normal for a tourist trap.

You held Maddalyn’s hand, and her other hand held her parasol as you walked down the sand- a small clutch of grey-suited debtors picking up garbage told you that some investment had been made to keeping this place clean, though the amount of visitors here sharing the place was not a jam-packed mess, so you had your space.

“Ah,” Maddalyn saw something and pulled you closer to the water, where something drifted in on the waves flowing over the beach. A Sea Lotus- a floating sort of marine plant that bloomed when near land. They were normally white, you had read, but this one was stained with pastel colors from the tips of its huge petals. Maddalyn picked it up. “It’s been stained by the presence of the World, of the Maelstrom. It’s like what I imagine an evening star is like, but in my hand…”

She handed it to you, and you picked away all but the bloom and stem, and put it in her hair. It would wilt ere long- but for now, it could share Maddalyn’s beauty.

Onward you went, discovering shells and stones that were like what might be expected elsewhere, but changed- and Maddalyn could tell you what changed at a glance. Often, it was pigment, sometimes it was a lack of it, sometimes there were changes to shapes or patterns or textures. The Maelstrom’s influence lacked particular rules- much like Presence Arts- but it all seemed like rather mild changes.

Maddalyn found and picked up a creature with life in it still- a huddling hermit crab, ensconced in a round shell covered in spirals. She was rather adept at seeing these curious things, understandably- and had you hole it while she examined it with a curious lens two fingers wide with no glass, but a dial that adjusted the size of an aperture in the center, and a set of spaced rings outside.

“They’re fascinating,” she said, still staring through the device, “I wish I had more things from my study, some records to compare. This creature here is not only influenced by the Maelstrom, but by the shell of another differently affected animal. One from lower in the sea, perhaps closer to where the waters touch the gale…”
>>
She thought some, then motioned for you to lower the creature back to the sand. “This water…I wonder. Can I have you help me with something? I need…essence.”

“Essence?” you squinted at Maddalyn.

“Blood, basically. Or…er, semen. Either one.” She blushed scarlet, “They’re not the same, of course, but for what I want to do, I didn’t want to ask you to cut yourself…”

It wasn’t that you didn’t have an obvious preference- more that there was a time and a place…though you could find one.

>Well. If she wanted some essence, you could find some alley or private room for her to collect it personally, surely…
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.
>Did she have to do such studies here? It’d be more prudent to take whatever was here and bring it someplace safer, no? The patience would be safer.
>Other?

As you thought, you saw Maddalyn look around, and fix her gaze on somebody about ten meters off.

“Richter,” Maddalyn said lowly, “She’s here.”

“Who?”

“The woman,” she whispered, “From the Reich, who was following us. She’s here.”

“Where?” you looked, and didn’t see anybody familiar. Maddalyn pointed. “The brunette…” you explained the significance of that to Maddalyn, “Her hair color isn’t the same. Though you could see it. Somewhat. In the shape of the face and eye, even though looking anywhere else would have told you it was somebody different. Though there wasn’t much she would have been able to do to disguise this from her true appearance- as she wore sandals, a broad cloth sunhat, and a black atom suit supplemented by a translucent silk wrap skirt and large tinted glasses. Hardly uncommon wear here.

“She’s come all the way here,” Maddalyn said, “I can’t fathom why. I just wonder how long she’s been doing it. I didn’t see her in the mountains, and I wasn’t looking for her on the way here. Though…”

“I can’t think of why either,” you said. “Maybe just to fulfill the Kaiser’s curiosity? It seems like a waste of time to me.”
>Confront her. This isn’t the Reich. You can do such a thing here. (What to say/do?)
>Go back and have one of your guards distract her. Maddalyn clearly didn’t like being stalked.
>Ignore her. If she wanted to watch you two, you were glad for the audience. Not like you were up to anything she’d be concerned with.
>Other?
>>
>>5380202
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.
>Ignore her. If she wanted to watch you two, you were glad for the audience. Not like you were up to anything she’d be concerned with.
>>
>>5380202
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.

>Go back and have one of your guards distract her. Maddalyn clearly didn’t like being stalked.
>>
>>5380202
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.
>Confront her. This isn’t the Reich. You can do such a thing here.
A ginger and a man in a mask, flanked with uniformed guards in this part of the world will never succeed in hiding from an inquisitive spy for long.
Get her attention with another wave. Ask her if it's business or pleasure that brings a lone woman all the way to this beach at the edge of the world.
We were told to expect the possibility of being considered a celebrity upon arriving in the Reich, but for a fan to follow us all this way beyond Henrik's borders surpasses flattery and could almost be mistaken for stalking.
Is there something particular she would like shared with us this once, to sate any further curiosity diplomatically, or do we need our guard to impress stricter measures against any suspected pursuers?
>>
>>5380202
>>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.
>Ignore her. If she wanted to watch you two, you were glad for the audience. Not like you were up to anything she’d be concerned with.


I think it would be funny to have the Reich agent watch as Maddalyn collected our essence in a back alley though
>>
>>5380202
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.

>Ignore her. If she wanted to watch you two, you were glad for the audience. Not like you were up to anything she’d be concerned with.

Are her eye colours the same though
>>
>>5380202
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.
>Ignore her. If she wanted to watch you two, you were glad for the audience. Not like you were up to anything she’d be concerned with.
She's only here because we wanted to be cheeky and let her know that we knew who she was. Let's not make the same dumb mistake again or we might have a more permanent tail, if we haven't already got one.
>>
>>5380202
>Don’t be a pain. It would be easy enough to nick yourself and get some drops of blood.

>Confront her. This isn’t the Reich. You can do such a thing here. (What to say/do?)
Pretend we don't know she's a spy. Instead attempt to solicit her for outrageously kinky group sex until she goes away.
>>
>>5380451
She's a spy, she might very well be down for it, especially if it gives her an opportunity to get more info on us. What are we gonna do if she says yes? No, actually making a kinky sex group is not an option
>>
>>5380455
>What are we gonna do if she says yes?
Add kinks until she reconsiders.
>>
>>5380202
>>Well. If she wanted some essence, you could find some alley or private room for her to collect it personally, surely…
>Ignore her. If she wanted to watch you two, you were glad for the audience.
>>
>>5380202
>Did she have to do such studies here? It’d be more prudent to take whatever was here and bring it someplace safer, no? The patience would be safer.
I wonder if this tail is because of the mention of Presence to the Kaiser. It would certainly make sense to have us followed to the best of his capacity if we are poking around the Maelstrom.

>Go back and have one of your guards distract her. Maddalyn clearly didn’t like being stalked.
>>
>>5380441
Do you remember that car we took from the airport in the dark to where we are now? She didn't just ask around and follow our plane and find us by coincidence, she tracked our car all the way out here after we had landed. She is already as invested in tailing us as one can get and she's doing it in plain clothes with little subtlety for subterfuge. She is after something that merely observing from a dark alley won't cut. She wants to talk.
I don't know what ignoring her at this stage is expected to yield besides prolonging her hunt. Think how long the IO had that operative living out on the Ellowie/Twaryi border, he was willing to expend years just sitting on an assignment before he got his chance to activate. You think she'll just get bored and go home emptyhanded after a week, when she's already shown enough autonomy to follow us across half a continent?
We're on a beach in the middle of the day, surrounded by merchants and our guards, she isn't going to throw us in a bag or shoot us, right now she has no choice but to be civil and speak with us and we have no safer opportunity to speak with a spy than somewhere their secrecy can't protect them.
Now that she eyes on us, the longer we wait to confront her, the more opportunities we present her to catch us unprepared and MAKE us talk.
>>
Going to be out most of the day, I'll call it and write when I get back in the evening.
>>
>>5380641
>She is already as invested in tailing us as one can get
Not necessarily, we don’t know the details of her assignment

>little subtlety for subterfuge.
Literally untrue, the only reason we noticed her at all is because Maddy can tell her presence and her disguise means nothing to Maddy. She’s at a beach where her quarry is at and otherwise looks completely different to how she did previously. What are you expecting, an overcoat, sunglasses and an earpiece?

>She is after something that merely observing from a dark alley won't cut
Yes, a closer view and perhaps earshot. She would’ve been totally undetected were it not for Maddy’s presence eyes.

>She wants to talk.
Nonsense for both reasons I’ve already said, and also if she wanted to talk, she would just talk to us.

>I don't know what ignoring her at this stage is expected to yield besides prolonging her hunt.
She’s probably only here because we gave her reason to be here while we were in the capital. It may be true that ignoring her doesn’t get her off our back, but it’s far better than confronting her. If we ignore, then she probably gets nothing on us and our detection of her in the capital might be seen as a fluke. Otherwise, we at least keep our ability to detect her more of a secret. If we confront her, we establish a pattern of being able to detect her and that it wasn’t a fluke, and make ourselves much more interesting to investigate. What’s the point of confronting her? Do you really think we’re going to convince them not to investigate us by asking them not to? This seems like a foolhardy and emotional response.

>when she's already shown enough autonomy to follow us across half a continent?
No idea why you think she’s acting with autonomy. She could easily be scting under orders. She might not get bored or disinterested after a week of nothing, but she’ll be more so than if we give her a good reason to continue following us.

>Now that she eyes on us, the longer we wait to confront her, the more opportunities we present her to catch us unprepared and MAKE us talk.
Confronting her wouldn’t stop this. No matter what we may say to her, unless if we spill everything we know to her (very stupid) she would likely be unsatisfied and try to coerce what she wants to know out of us anyways. Assuming of course her goal is to interrogate us at all, which I highly doubt. Her role in the capital was to tail us and report on us, I don’t see why that would be any different here.
>>
>>5380667
I see the point of not playing fast and loose with presence manipulation with her around, so I'll change the first half of my vote to
>Did she have to do such studies here? It’d be more prudent to take whatever was here and bring it someplace safer, no? The patience would be safer.
for the good it'll do. Also a new excuse to bring home a crab heh.
What I don't see as clearly is how confronting her ourself would draw undue attention, but having one of our uniformed guards do it instead while us and the rest of the guards hide would not. We might as well all be wearing Von Blum's seal with them around. If at this point she's still on the fence over whether or not she knows we know she's there, sending one estranged Strossvalder soldier to speak with her is about as good as doing it ourself.
Ignoring her instead feels like it's kicking the can down the road. Henrik was courteous in our interview, but he's an ambitious man and we've seen firsthand how the Reich's muscle can show up in the strangest places, so I'm wary of leaving her an opening there, should the 'snoop on Von Tracht' case stay open and another opportunity to track us down present itself, like out in the field on our next foreign assignment maybe.
The Kaiser said outright that he knew we were a part of Strossvald's Intelligence Office, so is it not reasonable that our tail might suspect we found her out by relying on some unknown counter intelligence skill, rather than jumping to the conclusion that we're wielding presence? Would it not be advantageous to plant that idea and run with it, if she asks how?
I'm not sure what we'd lose by speaking to her if her masters already suspect we're up to wizardy stuff. There's nothing stopping us from being wholely disingenuous about what Strossvald's agents are capable of, just to muddy the waters.
She came this far, so I don't think she'll leave us alone until she gets some certain information and considering Henrik told us we were being followed since we arrived (prior to mentioning anything about presence) my guess is it's probably just general spook on spook data she's after. My thinking therein being, we'd be better acting directly and feeding her enough disinformation that she's satisfied to take it back to report on, rather than upping sticks on the honeymoon in the hopes she'll settle for nothing and the Reich's intelligence assets don't escalate later down the road.
tl;dr I'd rather play the harmless, blustering retard, than the retard with something to hide.
I'm not expecting to swing your vote at his point, just getting my thoughts out because we're well into the weeds as is and tanq gone.
>What are you expecting, an overcoat, sunglasses and an earpiece?
>Do you really think we’re going to convince them not to investigate us by asking them not to?
>unless if we spill everything we know to her (very stupid) she would likely be unsatisfied
No need to strawman me, anon, we're all friends here.
>>
>>5380801
I’m not for having the guards do it, I’m for ignoring her altogether (per my vote: >>5380441) I agree it’s almost as bad as confronting her.

>I'm wary of leaving her an opening there
And confronting her will close an “opening” how exactly? It wouldn’t do anything other than let her know we are aware of her yet again, which as I’ve explained, is very bad for us.

>is it not reasonable that our tail might suspect we found her out by relying on some unknown counter intelligence skill, rather than jumping to the conclusion that we're wielding presence?
Perhaps, that could be a reason for how we detected her in the capital, but the IO is very unlikely to have assets in Paelli.

>Would it not be advantageous to plant that idea and run with it, if she asks how?
No, that’s retarded. If we really were relying on IO assets to find her, we would have less than no reason to tell her, and we certainly wouldn’t confront her either. It would look incredibly suspicious.

>I'm not sure what we'd lose by speaking to her if her masters already suspect we're up to wizardy stuff. There's nothing stopping us from being wholely disingenuous about what Strossvald's agents are capable of, just to muddy the waters.
Well, as of now it’s not confirmed at all what we’re capable of to them, all they know is we have knowledge of presence. No need to confirm any suspicions by continuing to demonstrate an ability only realistically achievable by presence usage. There’s no need in confronting her at all.

>we'd be better acting directly and feeding her enough disinformation that she's satisfied to take it back to report on, rather than upping sticks on the honeymoon in the hopes she'll settle for nothing and the Reich's intelligence assets don't escalate later down the road.
“Feeding” her anything directly only gives them more information to work with, and claiming openly that we are using IO assets is plain dumb and more likely to get them to suspect presence business, and thus encourage further espionage. A better way to give disinformation would be to ignore her so she thinks her disguise worked this time, and so the way we detected her in the capital was through some IO stuff. Giving them nothing is actually an effective deterrent to “escalation”, because why on earth would they escalate with nothing to go on, rather than if we act more suspiciously? That doesn’t make any sense.

>I'd rather play the harmless, blustering retard, than the retard with something to hide.
Pretending we can’t see her serves this purpose better than revealing we can see through a very effective disguise.
>>
>>5381167
My bad, swapping from >>5380226
to
>Did she have to do such studies here? It’d be more prudent to take whatever was here and bring it someplace safer, no? The patience would be safer.

Better that we're aware of the tail but at the same time try not to do suspicious things in front of her even if she doesn't know about Presence
>>
I'm back from the zoo. Surprisingly the most active animals besides the birds in the aviary were the tortoises.
Who were inexplicably all going around fucking each other.
I can't help but feel that this is some sort of cosmic mockery in light of the content of this thread.

>>5380209
>>5380392
>>5380431
>>5380441
>>5380451
A nick is easy enough to get even on accident.

>>5380497
Anytime, anywhere, as it is said.

>>5380801
>>5381171
Can this wait for someplace less observed?

>>5380209
>>5380392
>>5380431
>>5380441
>>5380497
This Imperial is not amongst the women you've chosen to pay attention to.

>>5380226
>>5380629
Get a man after her, you're taken already.

>>5380282
>>5380451
Step up, have a word.

Writing.

>>5380431
>Are her eye colours the same though
She's wearing sunglasses, you can't tell. Neither could you tell last time, as she had her hair over the other eye.
Though the amount of people in the world with two different eye colors is incredibly small, so what are the chances, anyways?
>>
“What should we do?” Maddalyn asked.

“…Nothing,” you decided. Yes, you could send a guard after her, yes, you could confront this spy directly, but it seemed too risky. What might she see that would pique any interest, anyways? Frankly what was more concerning than something being discovered, was the possibility that she might want something with you, or that her or her organization intended to find some place to force something, in light of how far she had come. Yet that doubt wasn’t enough to sway you. “We’ll just stay out of trouble. We won’t be followed back into Strossvald, after all, and if we are, we’ve all the power to deal with that there.”

“Hmm,” Maddalyn flicked her eyes back, “I suppose. If you think so.”

“If you’re worried about being spied upon,” you murmured, “Perhaps you should save your studies for someplace else, though?”

“No,” Maddalyn said immediately, “You don’t understand, how the very movement of the air is…different. It’s not just the objects, the atmosphere, but all the currents that cause it, that move it, change it. It’s…unique beyond anything I’ve been able to get my hands on.”

So be it. It wasn’t something you were more willing to press on than giving that suggestion- your wife’s desires would be fulfilled. “Alright then,” you said, your voice heard, “I suppose for that, then, it shouldn’t be too hard to nick my hand on something.”

Though, Maddalyn tightened her grip on your hand, then. “…Maybe you’re right about showing some restraint, though,” she said with new caution, “We can continue these studies more discretely. In a fashion that somebody watching would surely not be able to tell what’s going on.”

A good plan, you thought, though it could wait until you had walked somewhat further down the beach, or back down, when the time came to eat and drink.

Though, in recognition that you were indeed being tailed, you shifted conversation subjects.

“It’s rather strange, isn’t it,” you said, pointing west, “This place flourishes despite that way over there, which Paelli generally wants to go away. Which they think will go away soon. If it does, then we’ll have been lucky to have made it over here before then, won’t we?”

Maddalyn bit her lip. “If it goes…then we could venture beyond, to the lands the Maelstrom was over, but then the rest of the world changes, doesn’t it? When one Maelstrom dissipates, another appears. It won’t be to the east, it’s not been long enough, so perhaps it would be elsewhere on the planet, and who can say what surprises that will bring upon Vinstraga?”

“No bad ones, I hope,” you said, “Would there be any overland Maelstroms besides the Iceforth that are around or might come up? I’m…foggy on my geography.” By about half as much as you once were, even, since your studies to regain knowledge hadn’t quite covered global subjects.
>>
“In Zhantao,” Maddalyn counted off on her fingers, “And two in the Caelussian continents. They would be far to travel to, though.”

“Not so large a step when we’ve come this far, is it?”

“Mm, no,” Maddalyn looked to you and smiled, “I ought to say…thank you for thinking to take me here. It isn’t a place I’d thought of…but, it’s just magical, in so many ways. I’d like to come here again, already…”

“As my lady commands,” you raised her hand and kissed it, and Maddalyn giggled softly.

Though, with where the world was going, you thought dimly, that was far easier to say than it was to guarantee.

The two of you picked up more shells, more oddities- you found a well of wet sapphire hued sand that held a burrowing creature in it under a small puddle of water- a living stone, that did not object to you lifting its stony body up from its pit. It was a black and tan mottled hue, with a concave top to its shell that held a small bubble of water in it. You held it out to Maddalyn, and she merely tilted her head.

“Funny,” you said, pulling it back while it clicked at you, “I heard women hate these creatures.” Truth be told you didn’t have many examples to call on.

“Well,” Maddalyn said, her tone turning sad, “Most animals don’t like me. So if it doesn’t dislike me, it would be unpleasant of me to react in such a way.”

Perhaps Living Stones in general didn’t react in such a way? This one appeared to be aquatic, or at least amphibian in nature, judging from how you found it in wet sand and under water. It was returned to its puddle where it promptly reburied itself. “I wonder why its burrow is blue?”

“Living Stones are creatures of Presence,” Maddalyn said, dipping her finger into the puddle and rubbing her finger and thumb together, “They may be more aware of the effects had on them. Maybe they can process it, manipulate it in some way. Codices are unclear on the capacities of more common creatures such as these. However…there could be gaps in knowledge, or potential that might be found in new technology…who can say.” She produced a tiny vial and took some of the water and sand, regardless.

Besides the local fauna and flora, you passed by some other visitors. Many in swimwear, of varying modesty- the closer it seemed that they came from, the more brazen the dress, though it only went as far as the atom suit- no SNS suit was to be found here. Perhaps at one of the larger resorts, where the more rash would feel more to prove.

Maddalyn tensed up passing by a group who were clearly mountainfolk, though they had adopted local fashion- and it seemed as fascinating to them as the surroundings, somehow. They weren’t the most mystic visitors, though. That belonged to a strange tattooed couple who sat across from one another, chanting.
>>
Though they were not as uncomfortable as the young couple who were busy kissing furiously on their towel they reclined on, without a care in the world for any passersby.

That was about the part where you decided to turn back- getting to far away seemed to invite bolder behavior. You and Maddalyn turned, and began to walk back- to get some food and drink back at your “camp,” and you saw the Reich woman continue walking towards you, closer, closer, then, without seeming to regard you, passing by.

You glanced at the stalker as you stepped by her, and she by you. Past those sunglasses- a beautiful blue eye, startlingly deep, like a deep ocean, to Maddalyn’s sky blue. It kept your head turned, even though her own gaze did not stray.

“Richter?” Maddalyn pulled on your arm.

“I thought I noticed something odd, that’s all,” you said, trying to remember what the woman’s eye color was the other time. “She’s going. Walking on.” Like she had somewhere beyond to journey to that you couldn’t see.

“It won’t be for forever,” Maddalyn sighed, “But it’ll give us some time to ourselves. Good.”
>>
For the brief time you couldn’t see the follower, and when there weren’t any of the weirder vacationers about, Maddalyn engaged in a quick series of “tests” that were helped by you scratching the side of your hand on a sharp shell- the left one, as the right one demanded a glove. The apparatuses she carried looked like tiny hourglasses, with frames supporting thin little bulbs- they twisted open in the center, a golden screw tube seeming to be the separation.

“It will take time,” Maddalyn said as she put them away the devices in a small wooden box that held them side by side, “But seeing how these react to different ambient substances will tell much…”

“Is there something you’re looking for them to do?” You asked, looking at the glass- and realizing Maddalyn couldn’t see into what might have otherwise seemed transparent.

“Not until I put them into something different,” she said, “A small sort of machine, but I’d need some privacy to set it up. I could wait until we returned home, of course, but if I found some things out now, I could…” She faded off, “Ahem. I’m sorry, this isn’t a research expedition.”

“If you wanted it to be..?” You tried, but Maddalyn shook her head.

“I don’t want to have you lost and having me just telling you to do things with little understanding. It can wait. Besides, this is all too open aired, and with a spy on our tail…” She pointed to your camp, “Did you see what they have to serve there? I’ve worked up an appetite…”

>Go and eat and drink. That had been your plan anyways.
>Offer that you could divert to those stone formations you’d seen earlier- it’d break the trail of any followers, and give you privacy for those studies…and other things…
>Let Maddalyn split with you for a bit to conduct her experiments elsewhere, with her guards to keep her safe, while you sated yourself. After all, the one being tailed was just you…right?
>Other?
>>
>>5381358
>Let Maddalyn split with you for a bit to conduct her experiments elsewhere, with her guards to keep her safe, while you sated yourself. After all, the one being tailed was just you…right?
>>
>>5381358
>Let Maddalyn split with you for a bit to conduct her experiments elsewhere, with her guards to keep her safe, while you sated yourself. After all, the one being tailed was just you…right?

It might be worth getting a property / more permanent arrangement somewhere around here if returning occasionally seems like something that will happen.
>>
>>5381358
>Go and eat and drink. That had been your plan anyways.
Nope, not getting Maddy kidnapped again.
>>
>>5381358
>Go and eat and drink. That had been your plan anyways.

We have the stuff the Major passed to us right?
>>
>>5381358
>Go and eat and drink. That had been your plan anyways.

>>5381415
agreed, no separation when we can help it
>>
>>5381358
>Go and eat and drink. That had been your plan anyways.
Eat, eat the maelstrom tainted beach food!
>>
>>5381422
>We have the stuff the Major passed to us right?
That depends on what you have in mind. The whole attache case? No. Select items from it? Maybe.
>>
>>5381358
>>Go and eat and drink. That had been your plan anyways.
>>
>>5381362
>>5381377
Send Maddalyn off, she's not anybody's target here, and she'll be better defended.

>>5381415
>>5381422
>>5381465
>>5381615
>>5381720
Keep your wife with you as much as you can. After all, you'd been apart plenty long enough for your tastes- and some things happened while you were away, it seemed to tend...

Writing.

I haven't forgotten about the sketches I said I'd deliver, by the by, I've just been more occupied in my time to make them than usual. I'll have them along before this gets kicked off, for better or worse. Some take more effort than others. I'd like to have a rather decent set of old heavy artillery, for example. Looking into that has been an enlightening journey.
>>
--Von Schneeberg Estate, Strossvald- The Same Day, Earlier.--

It was the crack of sunrise- and the servants of the house were up, but only one of the residents had awoken. The young heir to the household, the lady Klaudia Von Schneeberg. She had put on an ankle length morning gown and woven shawl after leaving her bed, no slippers on bare feet. She padded out her bedroom, and closed the door behind her- quietly. She had gotten up rather more early than normal, and her husband was still asleep- she had a book she’d left open just ninety four pages from the end, but he had seemed tired, so she wanted to get to bed that night before he’d be…too drowsy. For the nightly ritual. She’d grown a quick fondness for that, and had a couple of nights where she had lingered too long reading and her husband had dozed off before they went to bed, where he only wanted to rest then.

“Klaudia!” Tina chirped as she met her lady on the way, “You’re up early,” she touched Klaudia’s hair, pushed it down, “You ought to brush that, it seems like your *stallion* really let you have it, hee hee. You know, if you’re worn out, I can switch in for you…”

Klaudia cocked her head. “Would you like to?”

Tina’s playful smile turned upside down in a flash. “Uh, Klaudia. My lady. I was just having fun, I don’t think-“

“It was always the plan,” Klaudia said plainly as they kept walking to the library, “If he didn’t like me, he would like you. Then it would all be safe. Things are better than expected, and I think it’s because of your help, in some places more than others, so if you want to, then I don’t see why not. It’s plenty common for noblemen to have secret mistresses. Even more so in tales.”

Tina fidgeted anxiously. “W-well, I mean, he’s a hottie, and it sounds like he can really go at it, so I’m not sayin’ I wouldn’t, but I don’t think, you know, *he* would.”

“I can talk with him about it, if you like,” Klaudia’s gaze back was innocent, generous. In some ways her wisdom suffered from a lack of certain perspectives- ones that Tina helped with. That she could be trusted with.

Yet Tina waved her hands in front of her. “Klaudia, stop, alright? I’m okay. Rondo’s one of those *honorable* types. I wouldn’t bring it up to him. Just, you know,” Tina adjusted her spectacles, “Try not to bend the frames so much, these things aren’t cheap.”

Klaudia frowned, but didn’t push. “I talked with a Von Blum some time ago. The eldest of the second wife. Married to Rondo’s friend. She said she was going to Paelli, of all places.”

Tina also went a wistful mood. “…You know, your father’s not doing too good. One more heart attack would be…that’d be it.”
>>
“I know,” Klaudia said, looking down, “But I’ve spoken with him about all that’s happened. I think he can pass in peace, now. He isn’t as worried as he once was, but I’d like to stay around him as long as I can. For all he’s done for me…I hope he’s happy that my son will carry on his name.” It was too early to say that a quickening had occurred, but that had been the intent ever since her and her husband’s first time.

Tina reached over and rubbed Klaudia’s shoulder. “I think he’s happy too. His body’s just gotten so much weaker.”

“I’ve seen it coming for years now, Tina,” Klaudia’s look to her maid was stronger, “I’m glad he lasted this long. I know how worried he was, that he would leave me stranded.” A father could always worry after his daughter, no matter how capable she was, but also, given their situation. “I’d like to ask you a favor, since Rondo and I won’t be leaving for some time, I’d like to bring someplace here. I know how this place isn’t the most thrilling for him, away from his comrades…”

“Yeah?” Tina put her hands together as they stopped outside the library doors, “Always up for some holiday time, my lady, I’ll let some of the others do more work around here, hee hee.”

“I want you to go to…wherever you can find them first, but Emre will definitely have them,” Klaudia said as she opened the doors and went inside, “And find a pair of atom suits.”

“Oooh,” Tina tittered and put her hands on her cheeks, “That man *has* corrupted you! My lady’s set to become a pervert herself!” She realized one thing as Klaudia’s cheeks turned red, “Wait, a pair? Two?”

“Yes,” Klaudia revealed an incredibly rare smug look, “I want you to get one for yourself, as well. My partner in corruption. Several sets for each of us, actually.”

“Ah..!” Tina rubbed her cheeks like a squirrel, “For me, though, really?”

“All the funds have been allocated. Enjoy your time,” Klaudia said, her blush fading, “Summer is coming, and I want Rondo to have some of the finer parts of it, even north of the sea.” She tilted her head at her maid. “Are you going to get ready..?”

“Yes, my lady!” Tina bowed sharply at the hip and scampered off.

Klaudia watched her leave, then went into the library to pick up where she left off reading. Well, she thought, she’d see just how unwilling her husband was to be tempted when he saw Tina’s body outside of a stuffy maid’s uniform. Either way, she would see more of him. Not that he seemed unwilling to share- but the man seemed to have an unclear idea of parts of himself, and Klaudia wanted to dig up as much as she could.

To be absolutely certain of every aspect of the man her husband was.

-----
>>
--Il Bordo Freddo, Paelli- Present Time--

You and Maddalyn had dismissed any study projects for now- though you could have sent her off with her guards, you believed, and been fine. There was only one tail that Maddalyn could detect, after all, but you had a healthy paranoia about sending her off by herself, in a foreign land- just a bad thing waiting to happen, it felt like, even this far away from any potential enemies. As the Major had advised, your status could lure unexpected enemies even here. Utopian revolutionaries. A lot that eternally was looking for trouble, even if you’d only fought alongside any and not against them.

The first place you, Maddalyn, and Wiesel went to (the latter would return to share any food with his superior) was a smoke-gouting open grill, with seating at a circular bar under shaded awnings, but which was otherwise open to the air. The kitchen in the center housed fires which were fed with various sorts of wood, including one that seemed to be using color and scent-changed local wood as fuel. That particular one stood out- rather than smelling of charcoal, it burned like incense. You wondered if it might be used as such elsewhere, or if the variable mistrust of the Maelstroms would affect such things.

“The Archduchy has a general ban on Maelstrom-derived imports,” Maddalyn told you on that subject as you waited for an attendant to return with your drinks, “As do many places inland. It’s not seen as responsible to cultivate a craze for nonsense from the edge of the world. There are plenty of more local avenues for that, whose prices are not so exploded.”

“How expensive could some stone you pick up off the beach be?” You asked, “For prices to explode, as you say?”

“Traders don’t like to carry them very far either. They’re said to curse journeys,” Maddalyn explained, “Combined with the lack of markets that are accepting currently, it means only rather particular buyers are seeking such things.”

“Like you, perhaps?”

“Hm,” Maddalyn rested her chin on the back of her hand and frowned, “No, I’ve found what I needed close by. Besides, the dealers of such things are hardly ever reputable, and sending out servants so far is risky.”

“I see,” you accepted your drink as a server handed it to you- chilled wine and coconut water, of a sort that spun in colors with the light.

Maddalyn had gotten tinted lemonade- but she eyed your drink enviously.

“No no,” you poked her nose with a finger, “No wine for you. What if you’re already pregnant?”

Maddalyn raised her eyebrows, then glanced down. “Oh…Mhm…”
>>
She really ought to have known that, you thought. No need for the first bright new generation of Von Trachts to come out looking like a North Baou miner’s child- a population with particular propensity to drink, and a particular lack of manners that had by now been well studied, on top of other past evidences of the harm of alcohol on mothers.

“There will be a time when you can drink all you like,” you pet Maddalyn’s head.

The server lingered, and asked in a thick accent, albeit in New Nauk, at least, what you wanted for food.

Maddalyn motioned to her guard first, sitting on her other side from you. “Corporal, you may ask first.”

“Thank you, my lady.” He bowed, and held up four fingers. “Whole grilled mackerels on sticks, four of ‘em,” Wiesel said, “Red sauce on half and yellow on the other.”

Maddalyn looked to you next, then to the server. “I will have what my husband is having.”

So that’s how it would be. You looked at the selections again, and thought of what she might like to try…

>Something local- grilled fish, of a sort. Simple and wholesome, if…changed, by the nature of the place.
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.
>Cater to her sweeter tooth- something made from product brought here, rather than found here.
>Other?

After you had given your selection, talk wandered to children, again.

“Corporal,” Maddalyn asked the guard, “What is your son’s name, again?”

“Rene, my lady,” Wiesel said, “My wife’s family came from Delsau. She wanted to keep something of her heritage, you see.”

“Yes,” Maddalyn said, then looked at you, “I think we should decide, soon.”

You glanced to your sides. “It will be some time before they are born, won’t it? We have time.”

“I would rather…” Maddalyn sighed, “Know who they are, as soon as possible. For them to know their name too. We can change it in the short term, but…please. You’ve the right to the first child’s name, but I want it early.”

Though you expected that she wanted to approve it, anyways. She’d hardly let you name your firstborn after Alexander, for example, no matter what she said of right.

>A name for a boy and a name for a girl- this time, decisively.
In case of any need for reminders, there was a preliminary list of ideas and rationale in thread 76.
>>
>>5381955
>Something local- grilled fish, of a sort. Simple and wholesome, if…changed, by the nature of the place.

>Wilhelm for boy
>Frederica for girl

Name discussion can be found here: >>5219247
(https://suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/qstarchive/2022/5219247/)
>>
>>5381981
+1
>>
>>5381981
control+f post 5255787
>>
>>5381955
>>Something local- grilled fish, of a sort. Simple and wholesome, if…changed, by the nature of the place.
>>
>>5381955
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.
You know that scene in Temple of Doom? Yeah that.

>A name for a boy and a name for a girl- this time, decisively.
>Boy: Gerhardt
It's close to our father's name but leans more into Richter being a tanker/soldier since Gerolt is "rule of the spear" and Gerhardt is "bravery of the spear", also I feel like Barny von B has used up all the b names.

>Girl: Erika
It's the name of a flower, it's the name of a tanker song (about a flower), and the most famous (irl) bearer of Erik was a redhead. It's perfect. I'm happy with Frederika like >>5381981 suggested though.
>>
>>5381955
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.
Wrong coast for it to be something like snails, so it cant be that bad right?

>A name for a boy and a name for a girl- this time, decisively.
I have thought about my name ideas and at this point I don't think it I want to name them specifically after someone else. I would like for them to grow into their own, without even more expectation hanging over them.
>>5381981
These seem like fine names.
Even if the name Frederica reminds me a bit much of a certain undead from Game of the Year All Years
>>
>>5381951
Oh my, how lewd! Tanq finally decided to make this a real harem quest.
Seriously though, from my impression of Rondo, I think if Klaudia told him Tina was in love with him and asked to start a polygynous relationship, Rondo would agree purely out of duty to Klaudia. But he wouldn't be happy about it, because he couldn't just not care for and protect a woman he's in a relationship with, and now there's twice as many of them.

>>5381955
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.
When would there be another chance for that?

>Names
I liked Raley and Viska
>>
>>5381955
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.

>>5382091
Gerhardt and Erika sound good
>>
>>5381981
Supporting
>>
>>5381955
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.

>A name for a boy and a name for a girl- this time, decisively.
For a boy, I like the aforementioned >>5382091 Gerhardt.
For a girl, Dahlia. It's a usually red petalled flower that grows in the mountains and has to rely entirely on being brightly coloured to attract any bees because it has no scent. Has some parallels with a certain red, blind person we know.
Alternatively, name the kids after whatever appears on our plate
>>
>>5381955
>Cater to her sweeter tooth- something made from product brought here, rather than found here.

>A name for a boy and a name for a girl- this time, decisively.
Lorelei for a girl and Humbert for a boy
>>
>>5381955
>A local oddity- some strange creature, something adventurous and unpredictable.

>>5382091
I like these names.
>>
>>5381955
>Something local- grilled fish, of a sort. Simple and wholesome, if…changed, by the nature of the place.

>Wilhelm for boy
Wilhelm Von Tract rolls off the tongue nicely I think.

>Lorelei or Dahlia for a girl
I really like both, even if it doesn't roll as well.
>>
Today was rather busy, but this felt like a good vote to give some space.
I went to the Pageant of the Masters tonight, which would usually be completely irrelevant to any of you, but it actually does have a fond place in PCQ history for me. See, about two years ago or so (hopefully not three, though it could be), while waiting for that same show to start, before 4chan rangebanned basically all mobile networks, I was hammering out quick updates on a phone that was rapidly running out of battery. It was the drinking game with Anya where you first both got blackout drunk.

So it's nice to look back to that. Even if it's a bit funny to think about how long some people must have been reading this and not dropping it. I do appreciate that.

Anyways, to tally up-

>>5381981 >>5381985 >>5382100 >>5382449 >>5383170
Wilhelm- 5

>>5381981 >>5381985 >>5382100 >>5382449
Frederika- 4

>>5382091 >>5382401 >>5382665 >>5383087
Gerhardt- 4

>>5382091 >>5382401 >>5383087
Erika- 3

>>5382379
Raley + Viska- 1

>>5382665 >>5383170
Dahlia- 2

>>5382729
Humbert- 1

>>5382729 >>5383170
Lorelei- 2

People have middle names for a reason, after all. Your wife has two.

>>5381981
>>5381985
>>5382039
>>5382449
>>5383170
Local, normal fare.

>>5382091
>>5382100
>>5382379
>>5382401
>>5382665
>>5383087
A strange item on the list.

>>5382729
Get her something you know she'll like- because it's sugary.

May not get to updating tomorrow, but I'll try to in the morning.


>>5382379
>Tanq finally decided to make this a real harem quest.
Please, you could have had that with Von Neubaum.
Though you saying the other things does make me wonder how it would play out if proposed to him while in-perspective. Even though I wouldn't say Tina is "in love" with him, either. I'm sure it's plain that she doesn't want to be competition for her lady.
>>
>>5383268
>Please, you could have had that with Von Neubaum.
Please, harems are for wish fulfillment, and who would want to self-insert into Von Neubaum?
>>
>>5383295
I can't imagine self-inserting in general, but I can't imagine ANYONE wanting to self-insert into a panzer character.
>>
Sorry, update won't come until late tonight. Got up too late and the rest of the day is full.
>>
>>5383429
I'd insert my self between Framboise's giant strawberry udders, know what I'm saying
>>
>>5383429
Never underestimate the depths a self-inserter will sink to; they truly have no shame.
>>
>>5383429
Eh depends, Reinhold wouldn't be too bad
>>
“I was thinking,” you were not quite done with that yet, as you drew out your words, “For a boy…It should be Wilhelm. Or Gerhardt? I think Wilhelm. Some names after that too. For a girl, I think Erika…no, Frederika. Maybe she should have a train of names too.”

“Frederika Erika sounds foolish,” Maddalyn said drily.

“Erika Frederika?” You wondered out loud, “Dahlia or Lorelei would be good, too…”

“You’ve many names thought of then? Are there yet more?”

There were. “Humbert, but that isn’t as high on the list. It matters not, I intend to get at least a platoon out of you,” you reached over and stroked the nape of Maddalyn’s neck, saying this. “I’ll likely run out of names.” Though it wasn’t all the names you thought you might go with, in time. There were dead to honor- though you didn’t want to lay expectations on names, it felt appropriate to at least consider. The one trouble was that Maddalyn did not know Raley Kelwin nor Viska, perhaps never even met either. Would she even accept their names, when the time came to consider them?

Maddalyn had a quiet heartbeat of contemplation. “I’m naming our second.”

Taking turns was fine by you.

The food was served up shortly, in stout ceramic bowls with a puddle of thin, brown sauce at the bottom- where a flower of tentacles spiraled up from, each of the eight a different color, but all of them charred by grilling. Paellan-style Rainbow Octopus, though rather than the hue coming from different marinades and colorings, the local mollusks were indeed different colors, and presumably, different tastes.

You’d never had any sort of sea creature like an octopus or a squid, and the idea of eating one was beginning to lose appeal as you stared at the suckered, coiled tentacles, but when you had gotten it rather than the far more familiar fish that almost was your choice, your thinking had been, where else could you get this? Fish could be found anywhere. Any other day in Paelli. Only here could you find something stranger than anywhere else.

Maddalyn seemed like a child. No, not in that way- but how she didn’t seem repulsed by this alien creature. She toyed with it, eyes wide and curious. She took a knife and split one’s roasted skin, then its muscle, down the middle. A poke to part of it to see its firmness and texture, before moving on to another.
>>
“Don’t play with your food,” you teased her, poking her cheek before slurping up a bright red half-tentacle wide and long as a finger, counting on swiftness of action overcoming any hesitance towards putting that strange thing in your mouth. Maddalyn responded to your comment by leaning over and softly biting your arm, while you masticated.

The first flavor was the skin- tasting of odd charcoal, strangely gelatinous under the initial crisp- good in a curious way, and then a firm and chew beneath. Like an apple, in a way, and it had the subtle sweetness of one. Only a hint of fat and grease reminded you that it was indeed the meat of something. There were seven more colors, though…and after eating one, you wondered if they were the same, before looking about to be certain. No, it was just your imagination. Though the Maelstrom shifted what was here, and near, it remained constant. There was still a certain order, though a changed one.

The next octopus piece- actually from a different octopus, but a similar sort. The Paellan Peninsular Octopus, usually a mottled grey and rust-red, from what idle talk with a fisherman-cook told, while he had idle time as other customers left. The creature’s drab hues turned spectacular here.

Other hues of octopus had subtle different tastes- even for the skin, as they were presumably roasted over differing grills. Greenish-blue had a zest like orange, the blue-violet a snap and tingle like carrot. Yellow had a taste you were unfamiliar with completely- something tart, though.

“Look, Richter,” Maddalyn said to you, and you looked to what she was doing. “I’ve made a new creature.”

She had cut apart four tentacles and stuck the quarters onto one another, held together loosely through impalement upon a fork. You looked at it, then squinted back at her.

“Have you eaten any yet?”

Maddalyn pouted at you. “I will.”

“You should. It’s surprisingly good. Maybe less so cold.”

The further colors also strayed- though more towards mineral, wine, grain. The sensation that could only be described as chilled heat of the stark white was not to your taste- it was apart from the others. Maybe a wanderer that had been somehow whisked away from the very edge. Out of all of them, your favorite had to be the red, the first. Sweet and meaty, like something not of the sea at all. Ironic.

“Richter,” Maddalyn called for your attention again, and this time, she had each colored strip coiled around one another like a tangle of noodles. “I have all of them together this time. Try it.” She held it to your mouth, and you obediently let her feed you. It was…indescribable.

With a hard swallow, you coughed, “I don’t think whatever creature that turned out to be is one that’s good to eat.”

“Oh well,” Maddalyn brushed it off, “Maybe another way.” She did finally begin to actually eat them, though.
>>
The brown sauce at the bottom, seemed to be the great unifier. Even the white tentacle was good with that- and indeed, all of them had been marinating in that thin, slightly salty, speckled with rings of green onion sauce. Philosophizing over octopus sauce wasn’t where you wanted to end this meal, so you tried to soak up as much of it as you could with what pieces were left. Then perhaps a cold beer.

-----

You and your wife lay on the towel at your camp now, in the sun, in a descent now. She had removed the skirt, freeing her pale legs, and you ogled her freely- she smiled at you, as you hardly tried to be subtle about it, though after some time the new warmth made you drowsy- you napped, and Maddalyn tucked herself in beside you, in the crook of your arm. Maddalyn had frequent nightmares, for as long as you’d ever slept beside her, and for longer. Being near her made her feel better, she had said, but they’d never stopped. It was merely a reality of nights with her to murkily awaken to her speaking in her sleep, or writhing, and to barely-consciously, or unconsciously hold her until she stilled again. You almost never remembered it by morning anyways, or at all. Yet she did, those times when she woke herself up.

Yet when you opened your eyes, you found yourself in a softly colored, but mostly grey swirling mass.

“I’m not in some who knows where,” you said to yourself, closing your eyes again, “I’m lying on the beach, next to my darling wife, in the afternoon springtime sun. That place is plenty strange enough for my tastes.”

There wasn’t a response to you, but you did hear a sound- a singing sound, of some sort, but it was unlike anything you ever heard- you felt like you weren’t even hearing it correctly, maybe even feeling it, but some bubbling thought within you suggested that it was the sound of branches rustling in an unheard wind.
A presence.

“Go away,” you muttered, “I want to be left alone.”

“Then why did you write this note? Came all this way for nothing, eh?”

You opened your eyes and looked around, but didn’t see anybody.

“Hey, kid,” a voice that you hadn’t heard for…a long time, called out. “I’ve been waitin’, y’know. For you t’ come an’ find me, for…Judge Above knows how many damn years. What’s taken you so long? What’re you afraid of, now? Don’t tell me you’re that scared a’ death anymore.”

The heavy trudge of boots, the fluttering of a cloak, the jingling of equipment belts against a flapping longcoat.

With a settling next to you, the scenery changed. You sat in a dark night, grey hills all around, half hidden in mist. A yellow lamp was set atop a crate, and you were perched atop a long crate of supplies. Behind you and to the left was a tank- an m/22, a development of the now quite old m/20, a squat and small tank with but a singular heavy machine gun in its turret, but swift. A raider’s mount, and it was well used as such.
>>
Beside you was its presumed owner.

Long dark hair, green eyes, and a confident smirk. A face like your father’s.

He reached into his pocket, and pulled out a near-empty pack of cigarettes.

“I don’t smoke,” you said reflexively.

“Come on,” Heller said, “You really think it’s your lungs breathin’ real smoke here? You come to a place where death’s already touched us all and you can’t learn to friggin’ live a little? Take a goddamn smoke. It don’t count here.”

Reluctantly, slowly, you took one out, and put it in your mouth, like a sucker candy. Heller put a match to its end, and then lit his own cigarette, breathing it in deeply.

“See?” Heller sighed, “Doesn’t hurt you none. Not a bit, what with all the other shit out there. You ought’a know by now.”

You sat there, not sure of what to say. “It’s been a long time,” you said finally.

“No shit, huh?” Heller crossed one leg over the other, “Sort’a a shame. You’re not quite getting the real thing here. It’s the best we can do, so you’ll have to suck that one up until you think of some way t’ do better. Bet you have plenty to ask, a lot we never got to, a lot we should have gotten to. I’m gonna hit you with something first, though. Even if you’re sort of talkin’ to yourself anyways.”

You nodded, expectant.

“Richter, boy,” Heller said, “We were never meant to strut under fancy titles and lick the boots of princes. We’re a pack of wild animals. That’s what I learned after I dropped it all, whether I wanted to or not. When I had to I live out there in the wilderness, I found out what we really are. What we’re built for, blood and heritage and all. To fight and be free, no matter how it all ends. S’what I think, anyways.” He shrugged, “Just wanted to get that one off my chest right off, since I couldn’t get it to you while I could say it with my own damn mouth, or write it in my own hand.”

“I suppose you’re not happy with where I ended up then,” you said with a bit of discontent.

“I’m dead, boy, you don’t have to give a half a damn,” Heller laughed, “Maybe we’re different sorts of animals, you and I. I still think you’re wild, somewhere. You can’t refuse it, those of us who tried to bury, smothered it, killed ourselves with it even if we still walked and talked, ate and breathed. Though I think we both have an idea of what kind of creature you are, we’ll finish that thought after your take. What kind of creature are you, Richter?”

“What kind of animal?” You asked.

“Not necessarily.”

>?
Also-
>What do you want to speak about? Try to limit it to what’s most important- you don’t know how long this dream may last.
>>
>>5384823
Oh boy, open ended question as to the nature of a character. I guess I can give a shot at it.
>"That's a hard question. Perhaps I'm a cunning, calculating creature. Though, you're right in a way, I do have a good amount of the Von Tracht wild in me, and that sometimes comes in conflict. I think I'm also a loyal creature; it never sat right with me to 'desert', and I never would have if it weren't for Maddalyn's sake, and I can't see myself turning against family or country, even if it were to be for riches or glory."

Also-
>What do you want to speak about?
Not sure how much a dream apparition of Hell would know, but should we ask about IO/spooky shenanigans? He seemed to be up to secret note he passed back. Having a face to face conversation with the "real deal" might be enlightening, or a good avenue for us to pass a message along.
>>
>>5384823
>What kind of animal
A Dog
>>
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>>5384823
>?
I wouldn't say we're any kind of creature to swim particularly hard against the tides of fate, if anything, we've learned it's smarter to try and roll with them as much as possible and minimize damage. We couldn't fight our way out of the schemes of the Intelligence Office for example, so we took the safest way to escape with the least immediate collateral, which was gaining enough clout to afford some breathing space and time to build a "protective shell", if you will, and aiming to get out from the top in one piece and not in several fine ones from the bottom
Yet at the same time, we can't help but live as an anachronism. We've spent this last year going here and there about a world of shifting societal expectations and the unorthodox bridging of castes, always instinctively acting out the role of Ritter and in doing so, spreading ourselves uncomfortably further across the lines between peasantry and nobility. While it would be unfair to describe our way through life as being backwards yet, there are many alive today who would say we appear to walk awkwardly sideways.

>What do you want to speak about? Try to limit it to what’s most important- you don’t know how long this dream may last.
We promised to share stories, so tell him we how we met Anya and subsequently deflated her childhood crush with an unremarkable punch in the nose and a 47mm shell through the window, but how, hopefully, we made up for it by making her our retinue, then doing the secret handshake together and pinning a medal on her.
How through lucky circumstance and a teaspoon of IO meddling we happened to get Helman's sabre back and ask what inspired his own drive to find it.
Ask who this supposed son of his, that Schweinmann has acting in charge of the Hogs, could be and how such a person could exist, if what we were told of Hel's inability to produce children is still to be believed.
Why didn't he and our mother get along?
>>
>>5384931
Not sure we have much to share with him, he seems to be aware of us. Either he's been watching us from beyond the grave, or he's some figment of our mind, and either way he already knows what we've been up to. I like the latter 2 questions though.
>>
>>5384823
>?
Not an animal, but a man! Or at least least that's what this strange tall lady seemed to want to imply a while ago. As for what type of man creature, one that is loyal I would say, or at least protective of what is ours. I wouldn't want to grow fatted or content with what we've got now though, there's definitely a few things on the horizon that may need some patented Von Tracht wildness to get through.

>What do you want to speak about? Try to limit it to what’s most important- you don’t know how long this dream may last
I would be curious if Dream Hel knew much about the IO. Did they meddle with him any like what they have done with us? Does the codename Major mean anything to him? It belongs to the aforementioned tall woman who also seems to know some of his dance moves.
>>
>>5384823
I love my baby boy.
But he's a dog for better or worse.
Loyal to a fault, fearless and fierce and indomitable in the face of those he seeks to protect.
Some might find being akin to a Dog to be something to be looked down on, but is there any nobler a creature to be if not a man than man's greatest ally and forever compassionate companion?
>>
>>5384823
>>5384988
Oh and questions?
Um, what was the his deal with the IO, does he know who the Major is, did he experience any spooky ghost shit in his time, aaaaaand does he have anything he'd like to say to Anya that he couldn't?
>>
>>5384823
I remember someone saying Richter was a dog of the state or something along those lines years ago on our way back to Strossvald. I think thats a pretty apt animal to compare Richter to.

>What do you want to speak about? Try to limit it to what’s most important- you don’t know how long this dream may last.
Anya, if he isn't already watching he would probably like to know how his baby girl turned out. Apologize that we didn't take on the Hog's and the sorry state its been left in, but for sure we'll try are damndest to keep his family and legacy from falling into a similar state (Anya)!
>>
>>5384841
A loyal, moral creature.

>>5384931
A hard head at least.

>>5384983
I've had a needle against my neck, I think I can say I'm a man.

>>5384861
>>5384988
>>5385003
A dog. For better or worse.

And a variety of questions.
Writing.

>>5383892
Don't you mean raspberry?
Anyways, perspective shift to her, got it. Kidding.
>>
“What kind of creature,” you leaned an elbow on your thigh, cigarette feeling like nothing more than fog, “I’d say I’m a loyal one. Steadfast. Resilient about that. I’ve tried to be cunning and calculating, but I’m not sure if that’s my nature in itself. I can’t turn against family or country, I know. And those I have. I’ll fight to protect those, even if I’m afraid. I can’t fight fate, but I’ve tried to protect myself and those I love from the worse turns of it. I wonder if I’ve a hard enough shell for it, though.”

“So a dog, then.”

“Well,” you hesitated based off of the derogatory sort of way that could be taken. “I guess so. For better or worse.”

“Would y’rather be something else?”

“A living stone, maybe,” you half joked, “A dog isn’t so bad, though. They’re well-mannered and loved creatures, for good reason.”

“You aren’t ugly enough to be a living stone, don’t aspire for that,” Hell took your shoulder and shook it, “It’s alright to be a dog, for a bit. But y’know, dogs came from wolves, and when dogs get let loose long enough, they remember it pretty quick. So accepting bein’ a dog means also bein’ alright with the knowledge that, soon as the house runs out of peanut cheese and you jump out, you’ll be a wolf again, and a man like you ought to know wild dogs don’t stay lonely long anyways.”

“…” You took in that metaphor. What was meant by the home. “What does peanut cheese have to do with any of that?”

Hell gave you an incredulous look. “If you don’t know I’m not gonna be the one to break the news.”

If he wasn’t going to stay on that, you wouldn’t stick either. “What you said about our line being wild, though. I’m feeling like I might need that soon enough anyways. I hope it doesn’t mean getting booted out of the house, though. I rather like the new one I’ve managed to get myself into. Even if the gap between myself and my new wife class-wise is…distant. I’ve been all over, stretched between differing obligations, while having to keep the same line. Dogs aren’t good at having to walk sideways instead of forward or backward.”

“Not unless we ride on tanks, see.” Heller stood and walked back, slapped a hand on steel. “Von Trachts never win alone, you see.”

“Hmm,” you frowned, “No, they don’t, do they.”

“Speakin’ of a wife, though,” Heller swung back down and sat by you again, “Who’s the lucky lady, eh?” You gave him a questioning look- an implication of a question. “Not all knowing here, Richter. Just as hooked in as I want to be, and believe it or not, I like havin’ conversations, not just thinkin’ and knowing what the other person’s gonna say and do. Y’want me to guess?”

A shrug. “Sure.”
>>
“Not my little girl, huh.” You shook your head. “Geroldt got you his pick, eh? Or Eda’s pick. Eh, oh well.” He stretched his arms, “I thought it’d be cute. She’d have shaken up your whole world. Found and trained up a girl fit to be the fiercest around, and set her loose on the heir. That’d be a good match, I guessed, but then I had t’ die. Oh well.”

“Maddalyn Von Blum,” you supplied.

“High as you can reach, isn’t it,” Heller said, “You know, the Archduke’s daughter was an option. Sort of just shit talk, but we discussed it. How it might happen.”

“From what I’ve heard she wouldn’t allow it,” you said. “Anyways. I don’t think I made Anya want to marry me anyways. We’ve become more…cousins, I guess. Siblings maybe. I’ll tell you about it.”

It was a long story, and Heller reacted to each bit with amusement. From how your first interaction had been an ambush on your part, and then you’d punched her in the face and split her lip. Her disappointment with what had come around finally- but how she’d decided to join with you anyways, fight, be wounded, and even after, stay with you.

“Honnrieg was a good fellow,” Heller said wistfully, but he smiled at you again, “If I had my way, it wouldn’t have been too long after you punched her across the face that you were shaggin’ her. Couple that gets closer the more you tussle.”

“It wouldn’t have done to have killed her in that first battle,” you said, “I helped trigger the collapse of the city. So that she’d take her people out to her village to check on her sister, where we raided right off.”

“It’s for the better, how it turned out. Sounds like you had the right timing,” Heller said, “It would’ve been real hard to explain to my little bro that I got his son killed by the girl I was tellin’ would be his sweetheart.”

“So you think she would have gotten me?” you mused.

“My little girl’s my protégé, Richter. I *know* she would’ve gotten you.” He laughed, then sighed heavily, leaned forwards, “We did our best with her. Took this little scamp that doesn’t even know how old she is. Taught her to read, write, taught her morals, drill, life lessons, when she was lost. She turned out real well. Damn, we were all so proud of her. Still am. Made her a real fine fighter of a woman. Only, I started t’ realize, real late, right before the end, that I might’a not done her the best favor that she deserved. The only thing I told her how to be is a merc. A fighter. I didn’t set her up for somethin’ else. So when I went away, and the pack scattered like it did, she went and did the only thing she thought she knew how to do. It’s one of my bigger regrets, I s’pose. Didn’t mean t’ get her stuck like that. On me, on the way of life.” He shook his head and looked up at the empty sky. “Keep goin’, I want t’ hear everything my little creampuff did that I couldn’t see myself.”
>>
So you did. You told him about how she’d come back with you, how you sparred together. Going to Ellowie and her time there, how you’d taken her to the dances, how she’d rescued the King from assassination, the times she was wounded in the service and fought, but most importantly to you, when she was there for you when you needed her. Out of all your comrades only she could provide you with strength of arms and the soft warmth of her bosom both.

There were also the more gaudy times, such as getting drunk together and brawling. You showed Heller the mark on your hand she’d left- the Bloody Cross that you shared.
“Haha-ha,” Heller pointed and laughed, “You know what that means? She’s claimed you, boy. You’ve got each other’s backs as long as you both can walk. And you accepted that.”

Well, you *were* drunk.

Heller showed you his own hand, with a similar mark. “The other man with this mark is Schweinmann, you know. My brother in arms, even if he wasn’t much a fighter. He and I did more favors for each other than either of us could count. The folks in Strossvald didn’t like that. Wanted me to drag him over and under, but I said no. Can’t do that to a man I have this bloody cross with. So I took that fall. Funny as hell, Schweinmann felt awful about it for years. Said he thought he ruined my life. That I’d spoiled what I’d got just to keep his hide from getting tanned. Couldn’t be further from the truth, turns out.”

“He’s still running the Iron Hogs,” you said, “He claimed to have found your son. A cousin of mine. But you couldn’t have children, could you?”

“Yeahhh,” Heller leaned back and tilted his hands against the back of the crate, “Sounds like him. He probably dug up some guy the right age with the right sort of character and talent to keep things together. Not like it’s hard to find a guy with black hair and green eyes, eh? Probably just trying to keep it from falling apart. Because you’re right. This piece right here,” he pointed to his crotch, “I’ve shot so many girls with it that if it were a gun I’d have wiped out a quarter the women in Sosaldt, and at least a dozen in Strossvald, and not a one’s given me anything. Even the couple times I wanted to. Blessing for a rake, curse for a gentleman. My little creampuff was the only kid I needed, anyways. I didn’t want her to pick up my unit after me. I wanted her to go places. She always loved going out, you know. As far as we could.”

Those statistics must have been an exaggeration. Surely. Yet the sentiment was there. “Did you want me to pick up leadership? At all?” You had to ask, “I feel sorry that I had to leave it like it was. With a fake son in charge. Without its creampuff.”
>>
“Careful there, she hates bein’ called that by anybody who ain’t me,” Hell raised a finger, “Don’t worry about it. What I meant t’ do with it…well, all in the past now, and it’d take too long to put into the words we need, for the time we’ve got. Ask your dad if you really want to know that bad. Didn’t intend for it to outlive me long as a company. Guess Schweinmann thought different, though, I did think I’d live a while longer, ha-harr.”

“I’ll protect your legacy the best I can, regardless.”

“And she’ll protect you,” he pointed to the line on your hand, “Remember what I said about when the time comes for you to stop being a dog. That mark means you’re there for each other when you’re needed. In your darkest hour. No matter what comes around. When it’s time for you to be a wild dog, you’ll have another right there.”

Maybe another too, if you were lucky. If Anya hadn’t given up on her affection for that man she acted so surly about…

There was yet more story to tell, speaking of. How she’d met this man Edelschwert, and how once you’d left Ellowie, you’d joined the Silver Lances, and inexplicably found Anya again with the Republic of Mittelsosalia’s forces. Encountered her once again, in a disguise (that you saw through quickly), and fought a battle that you were both awarded for having a decisive part in seeing through to victory. Heller loved hearing about it, despite how harrowing it had been at the time.

“My little girl, earning a Silver Shield,” he said at the end of your retelling, “My nephew too. You’re fixing to make me cry, ha-ha.”

“I try to be humble about it,” you said, “It’s awarded for saving the unit, but…I wonder how much of my unit. My company? My battalion?”

“You can’t know, if things went well,” Heller said, “You could’ve saved the whole battle and not known, because y’ can’t see the future clear enough to tell. Even a small battle can shift the balance. Even winning that thing you and Creampuff did, might have been enough to keep it from being a disaster. It’s better not t’ know anyways. Even if it’s the case, everybody else’s fight mattered just as much.”

It was hard to think of the potential of defeat. What if the places you *had* been at had been a defeat? Multiple defeats? The Silver Lances forced to withdraw, the Mittelsosalian Army vanquished, the Ellowian Republic Army and Air Force both smashed and put to flight, Alpha Two thoroughly foiled. Could that have happened? Heller was right. That you couldn’t be sure was for the best. All of your comrades everywhere had their own part to play in that war.

And the images of the defeat that never occurred were trying to worm their way into your imagination. They had to be driven off themselves by your comrades.
>>
Finally, though, you got to the present day. Where you had entered Anya into a Capital Academy, where after a year, she would be a fully fledged officer as well as your retinue. With some more years, she’d even have her own pension. “It’s like you’ve come back, in a way,” you said, “She’s met father. Gets along with him. I don’t think mother likes her…” you looked at Heller, “Why did mother not like you, anyways? Was it really just because of your bad manners?”

Heller laughed awkwardly. “Ah, about that. Let’s say some women don’t take certain offers well, even if they’re in jest. Eda Von Tracht-Blutenstein, haha, she doesn’t like being referred to as a “fine piece of ass,” if you get me. Even though she is. Your mother’s a fine piece of ass, Richter. Can’t help but get a handful, you know.”

“I see.” You had no opinion on that statement. Though making sexually forward statements towards her would certainly be something she disliked. As for handfuls…would you tell your uncle that his adopted daughter was a fine…no, you wouldn’t. Mutual groping with your “cousin” would only be acknowledged while intoxicated, and Heller hadn’t brought any beers here.
“Though she’s put too much of herself in you,” Heller rubbed your hair, “You look more like her some facings than your Von Tracht pop. With that scruffy brown mop.”

You let him rub your head- and added on. “When I returned, I also finally found our family blade. Helman’s saber. It was through much lucky circumstance…alignment of the right stars.”
“Really,” Heller put a fist down on his thigh, his arm crooked in a square. “You wouldn’t believe how much shit your dad and I went through and still didn’t find it. Who had it?”

“One of the members of a family called Von Walen,” you said, “One of them called Teobaldt was in my platoon, then I found him later in enemy territory. He owed me a favor, so he got it from a collection from one of his brothers. After I did him another favor by setting him up with a woman.”

“Von Walens, huh,” Heller thought out loud, but he didn’t seem to remember who they were, if he ever even knew them. “Was he the sort that needed that much help? What sort of woman?”

“An Emrean woman, one who I met over with the Lances,” you said, “She was…” You motioned to your chest, “I can’t speak to attractiveness, but I can’t deny that she was…some of her comrades called her a heifer, you see.”

“Don’t skimp on the details,” Heller pressed you, “Are we talking more like this, or like this?” He changed the space of his hands from his chest.

“More like this,” you put your hands out even further than he did.

“Judge Above,” Heller whistled, “I’d like to jump on that and get going, damn. You said you met her? Wouldn’t have blamed you for grabbing her. Hell, I’d congratulate you.”
>>
“Anyways,” you shook your head, “After that, I got our family blade back. It’ll surely stay in the household for good, now.”

“If any more busty women show up in any stories you have,” Heller said, “Get to ‘em before the lamp burns out, eh?”

More busty women… “That reminds me,” you said, “I’ve had my run-ins with the Intelligence Office.”

Heller grimaced. “You don’t want to know what business your father and I had to do with them. Best you stay out of it.”

Too late for that, but you reassured him. “Father said the same. I’ve tried to keep safe. I’m not budging into whatever he has going on.”

“Good.” Heller said firmly.

“There is a busty woman, though,” you said, to lighten the mood, “She’s called the Major. She’s tall, with dark hair, and,” you made the familiar motion around your chest, “But…she knows some of your moves. Anya said that one of the moves that the Major taught me was yours. That she called it the same style. Does that mean anything? Does that code name mean anything to you?”

Heller’s serious expression didn’t go away. “Think you know already why that is, don’t you? A little more to it, though. My uncle was the one who taught me Eberkampfen. He invented it. I did put more on it, but he was the one who taught me. Taught his daughter.”

“Jana Von Tracht.” Or, at least, this shade's presumption seemed to indicate that. The truth might not necessarily be reflected in this place...
>>
Heller nodded. “Yeah. Your “major” is Jana. Bet you’ll want t’ know how I know, because me bein’ so sure must mean I’ve seen her.” You stared, wide eyed, as he then deflated the tension with but a few words. “Yeah, though. She’s got some great tits. Even when she was younger and bound them up to play at being a man. Had to really stuff those under a thick coat even after wrapping them.”

The nerve to say that about a relative of both of yours made you want to snicker and hide your face both.

“Anyways,” Heller said, his expression growing weighty again, “Don’t let her know it. It’ll only get you deeper than you want. She’s had a rough time of it, y’know. She was real ambitious. Had big dreams. Now she’s only allowed to exist as a ghost. Jana Von Tracht is dead. Your Major’s all that’s allowed to be left. We had a talk about that…before the end. Awful, awful time. The shit they put in the paper about what happened to her…she didn’t die, but…she still suffered. I ain’t gonna say it, don’t like even thinking about it, but,” Heller wiped his eyes. “Such a bright eyed young lady didn’t deserve that. She tells what happened back with nothing behind them anymore, like it was the weather that day or something.”

Despite the Major’s strict and brutal attitude, her disrespect, her frequent and seemingly unreasonable torment…you wondered how ugly the truth was. Maybe, for the sake of the honor of a family member, it was best to not inquire.

The lamplight flickered, and Heller noticed. “Anyways,” he said, “Sorry for killing the mood. Don’t chase after that sort of thing. Get to know Jana better if you want, but be careful. Nothing I was messing with should be something you get into. After all…I don’t want t’ have died for nothing. Let’s get back to somethin’ a bit nicer, with what we’ve got left, eh?”

>Wrap things up with anything left you want to take care of- ideally on a happier note.
>>
>>5385162
I'd like to ask what he thinks of Young Signy and her Republic, turning his wild beast stomping ground into just another civil part of the world.
I'm sure he'd have mixed feelings on that as someone that fought for justice but never forced that justice in the form of a government or somesuch.
Otherwise I'd like his last words to Anya, last words to Schweinmann in case Richter sees him again, last words to Geroldt, any last bits of advise, aaaand what type of women were his favorite when all was said and done.
>>
>>5385167
+1
>>
>>5385162
You know, Heller seems like the perfect kind of guy to ask about how to last longer in bed. I'm sure he'd get a kick out of that too.

>Don’t let her know it
How would she not know? Does she not know her own last name?
>>
>>5385162
What was Jana's favourite drink?
>>
>>5385265
Oh that's another good one
>>
>>5385250
>How would she not know? Does she not know her own last name?
Don't let her know, that Richter knows.
>>
>>5385162
>>5385167
>>5385265
This is great. This too.
>>
>>5385162
Invite Hel to show us around his old steed while we talk.
Ask if he's ever seen a large masked man or his shack and pet [REDACTED] while he's wandered the mists, that it was him who gave us the idea to leave behind a note. Tell him we've met other dead here before, so hopefuly he won't be lonely after we go, for whatever that sentiment's worth here.
Let him know that despite nature and time's best efforts, the shadow he cast is still as long as ever, that he yet proves to be the stick by which were measured a continent over, and despite not having a true blood leacy to leave behind, his own deeds will live on just as long if we have anything to say about it.
>>
>>5385162
Did he ever get to see some spooky stuff when he was alive? I know Anya can't so it varies from person to person. Tell him about how we found Emma, stuck her in a can, then she got stuck inside royalty with even bigger cans. Terrible lady she was though, shes probably better of like this.
>>
>>5385162
>Nothing I was messing with should be something you get into. After all…I don’t want t’ have died for nothing.
Well I guess that confirms it was the IO business that killed him, if there were still any doubts.
>>
>>5385167
>>5385232
The Republic, and the last words to all.

>>5385250
I have a problem, and nobody else will know I asked about it here.

>>5385265
I want to finally solve this puzzle.

>>5385301
Show me that tank- tell me about other visitors. That this place isn't lonely, and there's a legacy still ongoing.

>>5385347
Tell me about the ghosts. I'll tell you about some ghosts myself.

Writing.
>>
Something to invert the mood? There was another thing you wanted to ask about Jana…Judge Above, the mystique of being the Last Von Tracht had been ingrained into you long enough that it was hard to consider another relative. Let alone one that treated you like a dog…though she didn’t seem to want you to be one.

“Say if I wanted to get Jana a drink to cheer her up,” you said, “What’s her favorite?”

“I didn’t think you were on good enough terms to be buyin’ her drinks,” Heller said.

“She plays this game, you see,” you explained to Heller, “Where she wants you to get her a drink and guess what she wants. I’ve never gotten it right. I’d like to shock the hell out of her at least once. Maybe she’d even like it.”

“Alright then.” Heller rolled his neck around, “Let me rattle around in here and remember. It’s the least I could do for my pretty cousin. There’s a couple I remember. One’s mulled wine. Good and hot, with what you usually find in it, easy enough. She liked having that at Langenachtfest when her dad let her, and far as I know, never lost taste for it. The other’s a funnier one. Gin with raspberries or blackberries muddled in it, with some berry syrup. It’s called a Grenzwacht Gimlet by some people. Border troopers usually have local sorts of rations, you see, and that includes “medicinal” spirits. In the east of the Archduchy, that usually means East Valstener-style Genever. You’re supposed t’ muddle it with whatever fruits or berries or other crap you can find on patrol, but you get the idea. Important part is that you don’t put it in a glass. It’s a flask sort of drink.”

“I see. I’ll try to remember that detail.” You couldn’t imagine how you were supposed to guess that, unless she wanted you to realize something about her history… “How about you show me your tank while you can? Before it gets darker and we can’t see it.”

“My pleasure,” Heller stood bolt upright and yanked you up as well. “Took it all the way from Strossvald. I don’t know what’s been done with it now, but last I left it, it finally wore all the way out, and I didn’t have the heart to turn the old girl into scrap and spare parts, so I had it put on a pedestal like a statue in Gusseisenholz. Maybe they made it the center of a park like they said.”
>>
The m/22 was indeed aged, even in this faux-memoria. Heller climbed atop it, and you half wondered how he even fit in the thing. “Must be a tight fit.”

Heller grinned at you. “Don’t underestimate petite ladies, they can take all you can give ‘em, and give back more, long as you know how to move yourself. Come on up here.” He opened the top hatched and pointed in, “See, she’s plenty spacious on the inside. That’s the difference a two year revamp gets you. Experience with age. Could even get a bigger gun in that turret, but that thirteen-mil’s good enough for what you ought’a do with this. We got to where we could swap it out with a three-seven in an afternoon anyways, if we expected we’d need it, but then you need a little guy in there. Or a chick. Better to have more space and better awareness, no distractions.”

The gun talk had gone on from a point you’d focused on, though. “Speaking of petite women…and fitting in to them…”

Heller blinked, then started chuckling. “Ha heh, kid…well, guess I can’t put you off by saying I’ll tell you when you’re older, eh?”

You didn’t need to give much description. “You see, most of the time, it feels like I can’t hold out long enough…”

“It’s normal. Let me just tell you a few things…”

So he did.

“…Mhm.”

A bit more.

“That seems counterproductive.”

“Don’t be selfish, Richter, you’re not taking a piss, it’s a two person effort. Now, the last thing that I know works is…”

So you were better educated, even if some of the things made sense and others didn’t.

“Most important thing is practice,” Heller said with a pat on your shoulder, “So make sure you tell your little honey that she needs to get plen-ty of you whenever you can, or you won’t learn through experience. You don’t get good at lifting by just thinkin’ about how to do it next time, and you can’t draw a map without a march first.”

“Understood.”

“Now let me show you a neat bit about how this particular garterbelt comes off…” Heller leaned deep into the tank and reached far with a groan. With a metallic clank, a seam behind the turret separated. “Ah. See, the m/20 could be a pain in the ass for maintenance. Undressing that lady meant doing some awkward maneuvering. So the m/22 had that simple and easy bit to get at what you want nice and easy, without her having to wriggle out of everything.”

A lewd metaphor, from what you easily saw, for easy engine maintenance. With the flipping of some interior mechanisms, practically the entire top of the rear hull lifted away, assisted by some spring levers.
>>
“It’s coming off by itself, even,” you leaned into the fun of it with your uncle.

“Heh-hah,” Heller patted the upper hull, “She’s a slut, impatient for some action. I like girls to be at least a bit slutty, though. Forward and to the point. Less inhibited, more *wild.*”

“That’s the sort of woman you like, then?” You asked.

“Don’t get me started, Richter. I like all sorts of women. If y’ forced me to pick a favorite, though,” Heller spread his hands, “Fit body. Big heavy breasts. Long legs, and the smile of a predator ready to come and eat you. Girl with fight in her, ready to fight you for what you both want for the sake of it. Wet mouthed and sharp toothed. The personality’s pretty particular, though. For a man like me…I only played around anyways. Had a bunch of close friends that I hopped in the sack with instead of settling down with one. That’s the problem with lovin’ wild vixens. Nobody wants to settle down, even me.” He crawled out of the tank, “How about you, then, eh? Throwing that one back at you. What’s your taste in ladies? Body, brain, spirit, all. Don’t say your wife, that’s cheap. It’s alright for her to not be perfect. Only way you get everything you want in a marriage is if you do like Helman and have more’n one wife, heh hah. Most people aren’t that greedy, though, and shouldn't be. He could only stand it, I hear, because he couldn't get enough of fighting everywhere a fight could be.”

It might have been easier to answer in regards to aspects of Maddalyn, but then, there were undeniably traits she didn’t have that you’d have liked. She was far from perfect, after all. Though it was definitely better to focus on what you liked than what you didn’t…and what other people might have that you’d like to see more of in her.

>?

The rest of the conversation will be gone down, just putting out a quick update before I need to head off elsewhere for a good portion of the evening.
>>
>>5385693
>?
Ass. Gotta have it.
>>
>>5385693
>?
Honesty, intelligence, proficiency in what she does, cooperative, and a degree of kindness to be able to open up to. A good face.

I'm gonna love seeing the Major's reaction to us actually winning the game.
>>
>>5385693
This is an odd question to answer given that the only person Richter has been in love with is his wife and that before her, Richter was a bit of a freak that probably didn't even notice girls, based on reports of how he was growing up and during his time at the academy.
So I'll break this into two categories, Things Maddalyn has that Richter loves, and things he wishes Maddalyn had.

So on the one hand, Richter isn't shy about not being much of a tit guy. I don't think it's because he doesn't like breasts though, but he clearly has a preference for them being on the smaller side.
We know Richter likes his girls short, but also doesn't mind if they're as tall as him, given he doesn't think Hilda is all that bad.
We know for a fact that he loves Maddalyn's ass, but it's yet to be seen if he likes big butts and he can not lie, or if it's his wife's perfect bubble butt that he prefers. Surely he's an Assmen either way.
Personality-wise, Richter has shown an appreciation for girls of intelligence and passion. Signy, Anya, and even Hilda all possess an intelligent mind and a passion for something that's central to who they are as people, whether that be statecraft, warfare, or hunting. Maddalyn is probably the most learned girl Richter knows, and her passion for her arts runs deep, which is something Richter has shown respect for, even if the danger it brings to his frail little wife worries him greatly. In addition, he likes that Maddalyn is elegant and womanly despite her size and general appearance, but also likes when she isn't and enjoys being able to see her cruder side.
He likes that she's sweet with him and is very loyal to him, even if she isn't the most honest.

On the other hand, it's not a secret that Richter would love for Maddalyn to be more fit and hardy so he could bring her to battle with him and not have to worry about her killing herself, he's all but said it before. We know that Richter has a weird fixation on blondes, but I'm personally unsure if that's just because of his infatuation with Anya or if that's something he really likes. Richter has been shown to prefer it when girls keep their hair long.
Some scars are something he likes, but I'm sure Richter would die if Maddalyn got an injury that would leave one on his watch.
Personality-wise, we know that he's into women being aggressive, something Maddalyn has in her, but has only recently started to bring out towards him again with her role play. I'm sure Richter would love for Maddalyn to be more honest, not just with herself, but with him, and more trusting in his abilities. It's also safe to assume that Maddalyn's more jealous tendencies would be something Richter would want to be toned down.

Personally, a Maddalyn that was more honest, with a more hardy body, even bigger hips and ass, thick Signy eyebrows, and longer black hair would be the perfect woman. But I don't wanna conflate my own wants with what Richter has been known to like.
>>
>>5385799
>Some scars are something he likes, but I'm sure Richter would die if Maddalyn got an injury that would leave one on his watch.
you mean like her eye?
>>
>>5385816
No.
Though Richter surely doesn't mind a girl in an eyepatch.
Pretty sure he's said Signy looked good in her's at least once.
>>
>>5385693
>?
I won't speak on bodily features as I'm personally on team freckles and boobs, but for personality I would think any girl that is competent and confident is attractive. Maddy can certainly get things done, even if those things or pretty questionable it seems. She is a bit of a fixer upper in the confidence department though. Hopefully Maddy can feel a bit more secure as a Tracht-Blum if it gives her some space from her frankly bizarre old family life.
>>
>>5385743
>>5385760
>>5385799
>>5385998
Tastes expressed.
It's a bit funny considering it's sort of a self examination into a collective image.
Writing. I'll be flying back tomorrow so I'll try and get another thing out next morning before that, and then by the time I get back we should be set up to wrap things up, hopefully.

Also, I've been working on and off on the skirmish I said I'd try out- it'll be short, maybe three "missions" or around that, which I hope I can get into one or two threads. I'll try and put out some sort of info packet so anybody interested can get ahead of that, though I'll probably have the initial thread recruiting for a few days before I start running it proper.
>>
“I’d say,” you said as you looked over the partially opened m/22, “I like my women…competent. Passionate about their talents. Intelligent. A kind and compassionate nature. At least a bit aggressive and driven. Honest and loyal. Good, strong, with a sense of right and reason.” A general, broad stroke. A pleasant ideal to think about- even if it described a different sort of woman than Heller had spoken of favoring.

“And?”

“And a good, round bottom,” you said, letting it out, “A nice butt to grab onto. I don’t have a preference up front and top, but any woman I’ve felt attraction to has had something pleasing to the eye and hand down behind.”

“Knew there was some red blood in those veins,” Heller pushed down the m/22’s top rear back down with a clank and a click. “Last I saw you back on Velekam, some people could have sworn you vanished in the presence of young girls.” It was hard to recall when that stopped- even though it hadn’t even been strong social aversion, you just had other things you wanted more. It was around…when you were in the Academy. “So your wife’s got..?”

“She’s not all of those things, but she is most, I think,” you said, “and her butt’s a thing of beauty.”

“Don’t make me want to come back and see it,” Heller feigned sounding hurt. “Indulge me, though. How close did I get with Anya?”

“…Real close,” you said. Maybe even… “But, like I said. She’s not interested. I don’t know if that’s on me. It’s for the best anyways. We have something precious, and it’s not something that has to be…you know.”

“A pain, yeah,” Heller opened up the front hatch and pointed in. “Two piece overlapping hatch. Custom job. So you can get a clean view out when needed but not open up everything, slams right down in a moment when needed. In battles, what’s more important than being safe and tucked up is being able to see. The first shot is the most important thing to be considered, even if you’re not the one making it.”

“Like making sure a lady’s getting the first shot. Then the second.”

“Atta boy.”

“As of late,” you said, “Sosaldt’s been changing a lot. I don’t know how much you see or know, but It’s been mostly occupied by a new nation, from Sosaldt. Founded by Signy Vang. It’s called the Republic of Mittelsosalia.”

“Not the best name, is it.” Heller said drably, “Vang, though…like the Republican?”

That he knew about him was curious. “His daughter. I helped her carve it out of the wastes. Now it’s about as big as Plisseau. I’ve heard it’s doing well enough. Bringing peace to the land, prosperity, security. Does that sound like a good end, for what you had been a part of?”
>>
“Ah-h-h,” Heller sighed, “It was inevitable. The wastes had a good run, but even doing what I was doing, there was structure being brought to it. Civilization. Order. It’s what man does, if they have any holiness in them, and I tried to be a man of justice. Tried to make the Iron Hogs mercenaries for right. Think I did a good job of it while I was alive, too, but I was working towards something like your Vang friend was, somewhere down the line. Because it was gonna happen one way or the other. Don’t know how I feel about any Republic crap, though. Don’t mean t’ get all political, but rule by the populace is dangerous. The common folk don’t necessarily know or care about what’s right t’ do, or what needs to be done. They’re too easy to tempt with words and bluster in the moment, where strong and wise leaders wouldn’t. Ten thousand decent men and women can become a stupid mob of fool bastards with only a little of the wrong thing. S’ why the Iron Hogs were led by example, by people who had to prove their worthiness constantly, rather than who could make people like ‘em enough just long enough to put a vote in a box. The responsibility of bearing the lives and prosperity of a whole lot of other people ought to be a heavy one, and it ought’a demand a special caliber of person. Somebody strong and ready to fight whenever it’s needed. Ah, y’ don’t need t’ hear all that shite, though.” He shook his head, and his long black hair shook with him, “Ain’t the place to yack about it all night like you’re my brother. Seems like what’s there is way better than what there used t’ be, and a real place with a few problems is better’n a perfect place that doesn’t exist.”

“I had the feeling,” you said, “From how people described what you did, how you did things. That you fought for justice, but never wanted it forced through authority like a government.”

“That’s a pretty way t’ say it. What I wanted was to make it so the unjust always have an enemy. An enemy that themselves don’t become unjust. If y’follow. Hard times make hard people, and if you keep those hard people upright, and don’t let them get tempted by what soft and tasty things a dishonest hand might hand out…bah, never mind. I liked talkin’ about ass better than this. Ass is great. Not as great as breasts, ‘course.”

“Breasts are good still, yes. Of any size. A good face is important too,” you added.

“A good face ain’t necessarily pretty either. Ah.” Heller sat back down on the crate before the lantern, flickering, and beckoned for you to sit by him. As you did, he pulled the cigarette from his mouth and tossed it into the dark. “Funny place, this is. Wouldn’t have minded something so peaceful back in the real world.”

“You never encountered anything like…this,” you swept your hand around, “Any spirits or funny things, did you?”
>>
“A few times. Nothing big enough t’ shake me, or to make me remember them great. Just what everybody gets. Just enough weirdness to make you doubt the world. Sorry if that’s a disappointment, but life was already pretty damn interesting without any ghosts or spirit planes.”

“So you’ve never encountered, say,” you looked around, just in case, “A huge guy in a long coat, a mask, and some other strangeness with him?”

“Never. Not even right now.”

“Well, you’re not the only shade here,” you said, “I don’t know if you all talk or not. Some of your people were looking for you, earlier.”

Heller shook his head. “I ain’t lonely, you ain’t thinkin’ of this place how it is. Don’t worry about all that.”

“Speaking of ghost stories. I have one for you,” you said, “There was this ghost of a girl called Emma. A Valstener. She tagged along with me for a while. I kept her safe in a food can, until she got too big for it.”

“Did she look like a girl?”

“Towards the end she did,” you said, eaving out that she was a teenager. “She ended up outgrowing the can, and she got into a woman. I haven’t seen her in a long time.”

“Got into a woman?” Heller squinted, “Like possessed her?”

“It was a troublesome woman. A cruel, terrible lady. But an unfortunate one. Emma tried to do her favors for her health and wellbeing.” For what the Duchess had done to Anya, you cared not for generosity to her particularly. “In exchange, she gets to ride around in…a pretty good body. She was around a…here.” You motioned with your hands to your chest.

“Pretty decent,” Heller nodded, “Haven’t seen her since though, huh?”

“She’s in Ellowie. It’s not been easy to travel there or nearby,” you said. “More unfinished business.”

“So next you find a fine bodied broad that’s a huge bitch, you have a solution to that personality problem, aye?” Heller shook his head, “Nah, I’m kidding. Ghosts ought t’ move on. Not stick around like I’m doin’ here.”

It was still one of many things to follow up on…sometime. Even if just a small inquiry. “Is there anything you wanted to pass on to anybody?” You asked, “Father, Anya, Schweinmann..?”

“Eh,” Heller frowned, “The dead shouldn’t bother th’ living too much. Schweinmann’s good t’ be rid of my talk. Same with Geroldt. I’d love to pet my little girl’s head again, give her sideburns a little tug like she liked, but…ah, fuck it. Tell her I’m proud. She’ll think you’re fulla shit if you say it like that, so be a bit clever about it. Everybody else, just try to not wrong ‘em.”
>>
Rolled 2, 2, 2, 1, 2, 1 = 10 (6d2)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x8Ti3aFOtu0

The lamplight began to fade. “Ah-h-h-h, looks like we’re out of time,” Heller sighed, and the darkness began to encroach on both of you. “This is it for now, then. If it’s until the end, well, it’s better than how I left you the other time.” He didn’t hurry any words, though the dimness soon left nothing but you and him. “When it comes time to be wild and free, don’t be afraid, boy. Take it and run until the end of the world. Everybody will be waiting for you at the end.”

“Thank you,” you said, and as even that light began to fade, you tried to hurry. “Uncle, no matter how hard nature or time’s tried, you still cast a shadow of greatness over the continent. If I’ve anything to say about it, the man whom I’ve always measured myself against will be somebody the world will measure themselves against too. That legacy will always be yours.”

You thought you saw your uncle smile, but it was all black in just an instant after that sight. The darkness was complete.

All was quiet.



You saw a glimpse of something, too much to be sure of all of what you saw, too brief to collect it before you fell back to wakefulness.

-----
>>
The sun had lowered when you woke up slowly, and Maddalyn lay against you, her back upwards, her lovely mounds taut against the fabric of her swimsuit, even though it did its best to hide all but the edge of her cheeks, being drawn inwards in a delightful crevice to show more and more.

You reached down and grabbed her bottom, squeezed it and rubbed it, teased the fabric further aside. Content in the reddening sunlight.

She woke eventually, and only hummed at you as you touched and stroked her backside. A small suggestion for you to have another walk down the other way- another pleasant and peaceful stroll had, less people around, less to hear under the roll of the waves gently washing over the shore.

Time came to go back, as red turned to pink, to purple, then blue. Your wife seemed happy, as you finally left with your souvenirs, her equipment, your guards, and a pair of blue sea-salt ice cream sticks that you teased Maddalyn into accepting into her mouth in an erotic fashion, when the guards weren’t watching.

Back to the cabin, after that.

Once you returned, you and Maddalyn didn’t change out right away- you groped her bottom as soon as the bedroom door was shut- and she reciprocated with her high-noble, vain and chastising talk. She didn’t take off her swimsuit, but it wasn’t long before you were licking her against the wall, her fingers in your hair, gripping and pushing as she snapped and nagged at you. Her white single-piece swimsuit still on her save for one place where it had been tugged aside, you screwed her against that same wall, her hands on your back and your own gripping her bottom, her legs wrapped tight around you. However, the magic of last night failed to manifest- within only a minute, blissful ejaculation overwhelmed your senses, followed by you cursing your inability to focus as advised in the dream.

Yet Maddalyn smiled softly at you, her legs still closed tight around you, and she bid that you kiss her before you both fell into bed.

Heller did say you needed all the practice you could get, you consoled yourself as you drifted off with her.

-----

April the Fifteenth. Now, you and Maddalyn had journeyed to the northern plains of Paelli- to the Memorial Fields, where about a year ago, having arrived about half a year previous to then- the Silver Lances fought against the Republic of Kallec’s forces, forming the lynchpin in the unready and poorly organized Paellan defense. In these fields, foggy then as they were now, the war had been decided, and obelisks and shrines dotted places next to wreckage and old craters grown over with grass and flowers, a silent memorial to what had happened.
>>
Rolled 1 (1d4)

As you drove, some places by the road already had points to stop and look. One that you did so at. A tank worn by time, unrecognizable to you as a Strossvald-used model, marked where it was supposed that the deepest penetration beyond the defense occurred, thanks to the Silver Lances, sixty kilometers from the current border. A singular slipping through of but one tank, dispatched from going any further by what was clearly a few shots through its flank, from an m/28’s 2.5 centimeter cannon, if you were to guess.

“How many fields like this are there,” Maddalyn said to herself, looking about. She wore a long white dress, with long sleeves, paneled with blue and inlaid with soft outlines of roses, her collar open and her sweet neck and throat open. “How many, with ghosts seen and unseen…”

You looked around and saw no ghosts, and were thankful for it. “There are some memorials dedicated to the Silver Lances, certainly, though I think the largest is in the Kingdom of Baou.”
“Where would yours be, in Sosaldt, or Netilland?” Maddalyn asked, turning to you. “Where would you have a monument to your most notable triumph?”

You thought on that. “There’s certainly places where some battles were of more import to the war…”

“No,” Maddalyn shook her head, turning her body fully, “Not of what was of import to the war, but which was most significant to you. For whatever reason. Even if it is something that might be humble. I’d like to imagine it. What it would be like, what that monument would be…if we might see it someday ourselves.”

>Sundersschirm. Specifically, your battle alongside Blind. Where the Netillian offensive was turned back preemptively- and the day won.
>The battle in the night- where you’d held firm with only minimal support, alongside allies from the Republic, your past, and the Silver Lances both. Where you’d been forced to bring forth your last resort…
>Your platoon’s battleground against the Ace. Where the scores of that war were settled- where your final battle turned out to be.
>Other?
Also-
>What would that monument be, if anything?
>>
>>5386208
>The battle in the night- where you’d held firm with only minimal support, alongside allies from the Republic, your past, and the Silver Lances both. Where you’d been forced to bring forth your last resort…

>What would that monument be, if anything?
A simple centopath, dedicated to the fallen
>>
>>5386208
>Sundersschirm. Specifically, your battle alongside Blind. Where the Netillian offensive was turned back preemptively- and the day won.

>What would that monument be, if anything?
A statue of the Tank of course.
>>
>>5386226
Seconding
>>
>>5386208
>>The battle in the night- where you’d held firm with only minimal support, alongside allies from the Republic, your past, and the Silver Lances both. Where you’d been forced to bring forth your last resort…
>>
>>5386208
>>The battle in the night- where you’d held firm with only minimal support, alongside allies from the Republic, your past, and the Silver Lances both. Where you’d been forced to bring forth your last resort…
>>
>>5386208
>Sundersschirm. Specifically, your battle alongside Blind. Where the Netillian offensive was turned back preemptively- and the day won.
As impressive as the night battle and Vehrlors' sacrifice were, I think Sundersschirm is the strongest candidate for a memorial to the Lances and the Republic, considering how many we lost in the run up to it and concurrent with our own portion of the battle (Beckel, Von Silbertau, the Sleepwalker spooks, etc.).
>>
>>5386208
>The battle in the night- where you’d held firm with only minimal support, alongside allies from the Republic, your past, and the Silver Lances both. Where you’d been forced to bring forth your last resort…
>>
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>>5386208
>What would that monument be, if anything?
durr forgot this part. The Republic standard's centremost, ringed star at the tip of a lance. Perhaps based on a knocked out Netillian turret with a plaque on it's cheek.
>>
>>5386208
>>5386208
>Sundersschirm. Specifically, your battle alongside Blind. Where the Netillian offensive was turned back preemptively- and the day won.
>Statue of the tank
Both this and Sunderschirm were significant, it’s hard to decide. Night battle was a display of courage and heroism, and Sunderschirm was a display of leadership and planning. Initially I lean to night battle, but thinking on it more, I think the latter might be more significant, especially as Richter comes more into the role of a leader rather than strictly a fighter.
>>
Going to leave this open because I probably won't have time to quite finish an update, along with what I want to have in it.

Though in the meantime, I'd like two people to pick numbers between one and six. You may have noticed those rolls, it's just deciding something that'll be shown soon at the end, and I can't help but want to scramble up numbers one more time.
>>
>>5386632
Ley's go with three.
>>
>>5386632
I pick the humble 4
>>
>>5386208
>>The battle in the night- where you’d held firm with only minimal support, alongside allies from the Republic, your past, and the Silver Lances both. Where you’d been forced to bring forth your last resort…
>>
>>5386223
>>5386305
>>5386323
>>5386404
>>5387067
The desperate stand in the night.

>>5386226
>>5386261
>>5386399
>>5386424
The great battle of Sundersschirm- and your part in it.

Writing. We'll see if I can't do this and post it while waiting in terminal.

Of course, the numbers being tossed around all willy nilly do have a purpose. The next generation is being determined.
>>
>>5387079
the next generation huh?

>>5386201
that sure is a lot of kids then...

I wonder what the d4 is for
>>
>>5387119
To be specific- there were six to determine. Maddalyn's, Klaudia's, Hilda's, and Felicia's. Then the sixth one- Owl 3's.
Then the d4 and the number picks were to further scramble things up.
A bit convoluted a process just to get to who's got sons or daughters, but the initial roll felt too...uniform.
>>
>>5387135
Who's having twins?
>>
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>>5387213
I will give you a hint.
>>
>>5387245
Oh yes, somehow Hilda's scene with Gerovic totally slipped my mind.
>>
Back at home, finally. I can use formatting again.
Not that there's much thread left. Update soon.
>>
The question of what the monument of your choice was rather simple- a tank, or something to do with one, at least. Whether it would be one of your own, or that of the defeated enemy, perhaps with your allies’ standard and the Silver Lances’ over it, wasn’t too clear- only that the tools of battle be defined for what they were. That it was a clash of armored beast against beast. The defining location was more difficult. The mind jumped to Sundersschirm- it was where the famous battle had been, the thing talked about still even now, and directly after, for its importance. It would be a mark in history for certain- but it didn’t feel entirely yours, as Maddalyn might put it. Even your part in it might not have been as personal as she might speak of, despite it potentially being a potential point of climax, where the war may have been decided for one side or the other, even if it was but a tilt towards one direction or the other rather than a cataclysmic fall. For there was one other place- a more desperate one, a battle where you’d been forced to use that last resort, the Hellfire shell, to tip the scales of the battle back towards your own. A dangerous decision- and one you felt you may have only slimly avoided the consequences of such a choice to survive it.

“It was at a town with no name,” you said, “It might have had one, but nobody there at the time seemed to know. A Netillian armored attack came during the night, and I was one of the few around to defend the place. There were others, gun crews, other tankers, riflemen, but not enough. It was a close matter, but if I hadn’t chanced upon being there…” You bit your lip, and pondered. “It’d be nice to see some sort of marker there, perhaps learn what the place is called, or what its new name might be. For all that happened in that one night.” Some tribute both to the defenders and those whom you’d given the order to be made into dust, deploying a weapon that nobody could have known would be a factor.

“…Tell me more,” Maddalyn requested as she stared at the monument you both beheld, “All you can remember.”

You’d told about it before, you thought- in letters, though perhaps you misremembered what details you may have included. Besides, you had no excuse to not refresh her memory of them. How you’d gotten there and why- who you met, the forces gathered in better detail. The use of the Hellfire shell, which she already knew of, but you saw lingering distress in your mention of its usage against men.

“So there was no follow up on that?” Maddalyn asked. “Nothing recent?”
>>
“I was gone in the morning. The war moved on,” you said, “Soulbinders popped up, but I don’t think anybody found me out. Just that something strange occurred.” Though perhaps the attention from the Silver Lances’ senior command might reveal your presence at such a strange conclusion to the battle…though they had not said anything of it. Without knowledge of the presence, what information was there to even glean? It would be a mystery to all, and nothing to complain about.

There was only a bit more to follow on. How your fellow defenders had continued to follow you after. “An Emrean woman and her charges, and revolutionaries,” Maddalyn reviewed when you were done. “Sosaldtian gangers turned soldiers. You attract strange company, don’t you?”

“Maybe I’m strange company myself,” you said back. Considering your mask, the burns on your face, the mechanisms that were your digits, your history, your lineage…you must have often been among the strangest in a unit indeed. Perhaps the only stranger might be the wife that stood next to you.

-----

Further on, you moved on the Memorial Plain, and the car was parked at a rest area. Here, there was more wreckage that had never been cleared out, bits of detritus that were enshrined, decorated with mysterious tags- the locals with measures against the vengeful dead of war, you were told by explanatory placards. Funny. You’d have liked to have met some old would-be comrades.

“My gunner and radioman,” you told Maddalyn, “They were part of these battles. So were some others in my platoon, other officers. Most of them, in fact. I was new. Of the four the only one who didn’t have prior service here was another’s younger brother. Brothers of the family Von Rotehof.” You’d spoken with Elder Von Rotehof and Vehrlors about their time, idly. Yet not Van Halm. Oskar Van Halm’s details of service were still unclear. Someday you might catch up, you hoped.

“You mentioned that your driver Malachi is likely Kallean,” Maddalyn said, “Do you think he may have participated in this, too, on the other side?”

“I don’t know,” you said, “He’s certainly talented, and strong. He knows battle. I don’t know if that means he was once an enemy of the Lances, though.” Just that he was very far from home, and never seemed to indicate that he would be heading back anytime soon. If ever. His past was a mystery, and one he seemed content to keep hidden, in preference of what and who he had around him at present.

“Surely you’ve the right to inquire,” Maddalyn said, “How many battles have you both endured? How much time? Has he even showed his face?”

“He hasn’t. I don’t need him to show it, though.”
>>
“Hm…” Maddalyn reached out and touched your face, stroked your nose, your cheek, your chin. She liked to do that often. She could not see faces normally with her strange vision- this was how she ascertained valuable details. Confirmed what her eyes could not perceive.

Further along the trails, there was a scene of Paellan bravery.

The Paellan military was some awkward adjacent form to Strossvald’s- each Prince in the Princely Confederation collected levies and donated them to the Regential Council’s military command- the Regential Council an eternal regency, as they only convened for emergencies. Conscription was an unpopular duty, and the Paellan army even before it had been tested in Vitelia had been a mix of sullen poor and glory hungry young nobility, adventurers, and unruly sorts escaping punishment through service. They wore bright blues, whether in full coats like the noble Lancers, or the drab black common Regential riflemen, who still bore loud stripes and trim.

The Paellan army that had marched into Vitelia found early victories chasing down the battered, exhausted, overextended Revolutionaries after they had been chased from Donom Dei. The Revolutionaries found iron in them as they were driven back, though, and even though no memorial here would admit it, the Paellan army had been smashed at Lapizlazulli, humiliated, and sent back. That shamed army was what fought the Kalleans.

They were still a poor match, but some must have hoped to redeem themselves. At this memorial, a tarnished bronze-capped lance with blue pennant stood up from the ground- where the Lancer Captain Giuseppe Chancrelci had dueled enemy mobile forces for five nights straight, fending them off until overwhelmed, and later found having not retreated a step.

The placards describing all this were engraved- Maddalyn could read them, and she commented, “Did your comrades speak of anything like this, when telling you about here?”

“Not particularly.” Not much respect was had for Paellan fighting capabilities. Enthusiastic but terribly flawed. Your radioman was more complimentary of their whores than their soldiers. “They spoke more of the Kalleans.”
>>
“Perhaps the Paellans did not appreciate their own either,” Maddalyn mused, “After all, this very year, I remember finding out in little more than a footnote, that Paelli had ceded territory to Kallec rather than fight again. I wonder if all the ones who had the will to fight are nothing but monuments and gravestones, now...” A solemn look to you. Like she thought of a future where she would have to visit your memorial alone.

Further up the path. Here, in a grown-over entrenchment, you found a Silver Lance tank- an m/24K. An ungainly looking creature with its main gun in its hull, resting here in its pit, seemingly with only scratches and dents, no fatal wound anywhere on it. Abandoned- and left undisturbed.

You climbed up top of it, and looked to where it was pointed- beyond, there were several other remnants of battle. With a hand reached down, you pulled Maddalyn up with you, and you stood silent in looking over the foggy plain. There was a serenity here- the fact of this place’s past made the quiet even stronger.

>If there’s anything you want to get off your chest with Maddalyn or not, now’s the time for it.
This will be the last vote for the thread- and the arc.
>>
>>5387387
>If there’s anything you want to get off your chest with Maddalyn or not, now’s the time for it.

Hope this isn't us in a couple of years, except against Imperials or Caelussians. Paelli seems like a western version of the Archduchy in quite a few ways but let's not copy their military incompetence.

Briefly mention our meeting with our uncle. What does her tomes say about the realm of the dead? Has she ever been there in her own dreams?

Can we ship the tank back? /s
>>
>>5387406
>If there’s anything you want to get off your chest with Maddalyn or not, now’s the time for it.
Not sure how this fits the mood, but I did want to talk with her more about our role in child raising. I understand she wants the best tutors to teach them etiquette and to school them from early on, and I agree that's a good thing, but I also want us (Richter and Maddy) to be involved as parents of the children, not just parents biologically. Perhaps Maddy can take over some lessons on etiquette or other things she is knowledgeable of. Perhaps Richter can take the kids hunting and teach them the land like how Richter's father did for him (this will be extra incentive to improve marksmanship too). They can also each tell them stories from their eventful lives. I think there's good room for them to be involved in the lives of their children and grow a relationship with them, I really don't want us to be just another typical noble family that has limited connection or affection with each other. I don't like the typical noble family dynamic, and I don't think Maddy does either (we can reference her strained relationships with her own family as evidence), so we should strive to be different, to be the change we want to see in the world.

Also hug her and tell her we love her. Can never say that enough or give enough reassurance.
>>
>>5387420
meant for >>5387387
>>
>>5387387
>If there’s anything you want to get off your chest with Maddalyn or not, now’s the time for it.
Ask one more time, about Maddalyn's past. About her family. The idea Richter might not get closure on these key elements of his wife's life before they start raising children, before his own potential death, is just sad.
She doesn't need to tell us, but she must knoe by now how loyal and loving Richter is.
Because thinking about it, I literally can't think of anything Richter mighr need to gey off his chest to Maddalynz besides the idea that he'd really want her to do exactly that.
>>
>>5387135
>The next generation is being determined.
2, 2, 2, 1, 2, 1
>Maddalyn's
Girl
>Klaudia's
Girl
>Hilda's
Girl and Boy
>Felicia's
Girl
>spoiler's
Boy

>1 (1d4)
The first girl, Maddalyn's, is now a Boy.
Thank the judge.

Not my ideal, I had hoped Rondo and Richter's kids could have been bros, but hey Hilda having one of each is very nice and so long as the Von Tracht is line pumping out boys, I can't complain.
Really hope the "next generation" line is more of a "current batch of brats" line because it would be really sad if Signy never pops out those big eyebrow twins, or you know finds love in general. Anya and Alina too, I want the best to come out of their romantic endeavors.
And for the love of god let's all take a moment to pray that Von Waleverthefuckhewantstobecallednow is able to stick it to Framboise and those Milker genes aren't lost.
We need those Milker genes!
The Future of Strossvold is dependent on them!
>>
>>5387135
remind me who Felicia was?
>>
>>5387509
One of Von Neubaum's harem
>>
>>5387503
Decent numbers theory, but then how do you account for him getting anons’ picks between 1 and 6?
>>
>>5387509
Von Neubaum first lover. The only he "liked" the most but still abandoned because she wasn't useful to him.
>>
>>5387511
Huh, figured we weren’t going to see them after Neubam left Almizea. Maybe she can get him to settle down or take responsibility some way? Knowing Neubam, probably not, but I wonder how she remains relevant in the story
>>
>>5387512
odds for a boy, even for a girl?
>>
>>5387518
But he asked for two numbers, and we gave 3 and 4
>>
>>5387512
I simply did not. My eyes totally rand over that post.
So let's see....

2, 2, 2, 1, 2, 1
>Maddalyn's
Girl
>Klaudia's
Girl
>Hilda's
Girl and Boy
>Felicia's
Girl
>spoiler's
Boy

>1 (1d4)
The first girl, Maddalyn's, is now a Boy.
Thank the judge.

>>5386632
>between one and six
So that's all the kids, not just the daughters like the 1d4 was.

>>5386658
>3
That's Hilda's Girl, who might now be a Boy.
Good for Hilda, she was worried about having a daughter and now Wilhelm has a whole gang to roll wi-
>>5386662
>4
Aaaaaaaand Hilda's Boy is now a girl.
Back to square one.

Again, not a bad lineup, and not something I can complain about so long as Richter has his son.
Dice gods were really lookin out, because lord knows we weren't.
>>
>>5387521
Both our MCs getting boys yeah, even if Reinhold doesn't know it.
>>
>>5387406
Hope this isn't yours. Mention the visions, and the implications.
You have m/24Ks at home that aren't war memorials, so no.

>>5387420
Let's raise this kid proper, if we could. As a favor for me.
Squeeze the midget.

>>5387459
What happened before? What is your family?

Writing.

>>5387521
This is correct.
Though now the question is who you marry your son off to amongst all these mates.
Though really, as said elsewhere, this isn't everybody. Just who's coming out first.
>>
>>5388187
>Though now the question is who you marry your son off to amongst all these mates.
No reason it has to be one of these. Sure it seems like a lot of options, and it would be nice to connect families with someone we know, but there are other women out there in the world, and it seems like women are naturally drawn to Von Trachts.
>>
Perlowieza, Ellowie

Ellowie was in a complicated state- though it was growing together again, with the diminishing of certain figures, to steadier times. Some through fortune, others through more direct methods of removal. The aspiring great general for example- had vanished after the Netillian counteroffensive that mauled the Netillian militarists and the Ellowian Republican Army both. Without that constant leadership, that drive, his cabal that had been inspired by him- the troops and their commanders were growing weary of war. Their home was free- and it called to them. It called to the Republic government in exile, as well. Their war machine was withering- and it was the engine of their continued legitimacy.

Yet could they march on their own home? Would they? As bitter a taste as it was for a monarch to be dictating terms to a republic, Wladysaw XI was putting on gracious airs. Offering a place not beside him, but above him- so long as he had a place in authority. A Constitutional Monarchy, barely even a monarchy at all, with the limited powers he allowed himself. A humble veto, a permanent seat in parliament for him and his line, and continued authority over his own armed forces were the most he demanded, as far as significant power went. The final stipulation was of outstanding concern…but they were arrayed to the south against the Twaryians. The King’s army was quite ready to be integrated into the Republic, rather than fight against it, from all appearances.

The Republic was weary. They wanted to rebuild what had been lost and leave war behind for a time. Let the King have his personal guard to man the south, while everybody else recovered. Let him have these little demands to be included rather than to reign over. The comfort of a homecoming would be a salve over the lost vengeance many had sought.

The King, of course, smiled and nodded, and spread his arms in welcome to his countrymen’s return.

All according to plan. Without Rummel, Field Marshall and architect of Alpha Two, the Republic had lost its sharpest fangs. That man had comprised the government in exile’s testicles, and a knife in the dark had cut them away. The steer left behind was more willing to come to pasture, despite its strength. There were others, to be sure, but leaving them be was a calculated risk to better Ellowie’s future.

He stroked Mabel’s face in private, his gratitude unneeded to be said in words.

“My king,” she said, holding Wladysaw to herself as they stood on the balcony of his family’s old castle, a fortress made into a decoration. “I am happy to be your blade, once more. Though there are many enemies left to strike down, if you would have me…”

“I would rather have my queen by my side, and not making me fret for her safety any longer.” Wladysaw tightened his grip on her.
>>
Mabel frowned back. “You majesty’s concubine.” So that insistence continued. She would put herself at bodily risk for him, but refused to jeopardize the politics. She had such an antiquated way of thinking, in this Ellowie that had twice changed from the last one where a King reigned.

“I understand that you’d rather reap the whole field,” Wladysaw said to her concern of enemies, “But too many inconveniences leave suspicions. Breed more enemies. After all, now without the alpha wolf, the pack has room to ascend besides towards my place. Valuable time for the throne to become normal once more, as we must bind towards the southern threat.”

She wasn’t happy about it- but she would not cross his word on this matter, where she was his tool.

An attendant made himself known behind them. “Your majesty,” the attendant spoke singularly to Wladysaw, “Your correspondences are ready to be reviewed.”

“Thank you,” he turned, and nodded to Mabel as he followed the attendant.

Firstly was a psychological examiner’s latest opinion on the state of his cousin- it was an extremely puzzling condition, but when separated from the strange physical changes, he had something of a conclusion- amnesia combined with schizophrenia from drug usage and withdrawals. So long as Kamilia was restricted from being reminded of aspects of her past beyond those of her request, it seemed, she was able to remain stable. Frankly, that she no longer partied with seedy and lecherous men was a boon in itself…though Wladysaw would have to talk with her to ensure that her association with that teenage boy weren’t some new delve into deviance. He hardly needed on set of ill morals replaced with another. Everything had seemed to have shifted with her- back from when she had initially completely changed. She was more like she’d been, but also not…as long as she was happy, Wladysaw thought to himself as he moved on to the next correspondence. She smiled like she once used to, around that boy and his mother.

This was from one of the lower order military men that he had sought to raise up. One Felix Wielzci, whom had lent his services to the King’s initial uprising as a tanker, and had aided greatly in initial gains. However, the former and later tanker for Ellowie had elected to decline elevation, for now. The reason given? He was adventuring. In the stream of refugees and veterans that had returned had not included his exiled family- so he was preparing to go and look for them.

A noble task, but difficult for one man for all the wastes, all the places they could be. Wladysaw made an immediate draft of a request to the Minister of the People of Mittelsosalia to aid that search, as well as to help reunite any other separated families. The chaos of last year had made many of those, and just as many who had quickly accepted that the separation might be a new reality.
>>
The final message of particular import- a rejection from the Twaryian occupation forces to the south to allow any refugees or citizens to be transferred to the reborn Ellowian nation. There was to be no negotiation- and no addressal to the continuing scouting raids and harassment, even though those had massively reduced, Wladysaw had been told, in favor of transferring forces southward, and maintaining control over occupied territories. So be it. If they wanted to continue to be obstinate, they could continue to be a future enemy to handle however he pleased.

If only he could spare anybody to send down to Vynmark…that would have been a pleasant place to break the Twaryian ambitions.

-----

Elsewhere in Ellowie

The town was still burned- and dust had covered everything. It was better than she had left it, but there was still nothing here. The fighter pilot drew her hand over the charred, half-collapsed wall of an unrecognizable home.

“Oi, Wrath,” a man she had called Fury Leader called, though his true name was Gregori. “We’ve been in this shit hole long enough, it’s not good for your head.”

“Shut up,” the white-blonde haired woman snapped back without looking, as she closed her eyes and tried to remember. She couldn’t, for some reason. She had thousands of memories of the place and none felt quite right. “Don’t call me by that designation, not right now.”

“Be that way then,” came the call back. “Not even gonna look at me, whatever. That side of you’s better anyways, turn-around Tabitha.”

“Psh.” At least he didn’t call you Tabby, she thought, momentarily distracted. She looked to the other homes on the street- some were in better state. Maybe, it could all be rebuilt. New memories to accompany the old ones…but then, what of when it was burned again?

The sky would never burn, she thought as she gazed upwards. The sky would always be there. She longed to fly again…perhaps, next time, she could finally fly to Hemelsberg. The great mountain in the eternal sky, and be rid of the smell of ashes forever…

“Hey, Tabs!” Another voice called- one of her wingmen. “Storm Lord wants us back. We’ve been here an hour already. Let’s get out of here.”

An hour? Damn it all. “Yeah, yeah,” she muttered as she turned in a sauntered gait. Though the instead of the burnt and fallen walls, she could still see the flames…and wanted them to go away.

-----
>>
Grossreich of Czeiss, Zeissenburg

”Prosit!” A pack of men and a singular woman clinked together sparkling wine from a recently popped bottle, and drank from fancy flutes that were far from their normal choice of drinking vessel. Their uniforms had changed once more- as their unit had, though they still bore Griffon emblems on the breasts of their jackets.

“You wanted to fly again, huh, Reinhold,” Bartholomeu said to the new unit commander, “Talmeier saying no get you in gear?”

“I’m no army man, Bart,” Reinhold Roth-Vogel pointed his half full glass to his recently recovered friend, “The biggest thing I learned from that stint over in Sosalia is that I can’t stand tankers, ha ha.” An instinct to take another sip, but he slowed himself. No need to be too hasty. The reformation of the Luftpanzer Project (albeit downsized from its former ambition) had been a big enough favor that he needed to not be embarrassing directly after. “So, Fischer, Covacs, you ready to drop in a couple weeks? They’ve got the new gliders, and new ‘chutes. Plenty to relearn.”

“Verily,” Fischer said, a few grey hairs having formed in his temples since last year, “The skies have been without its finest fellows decorating the horizon for some time.”

“As long as we aren’t dropping into fire again any time soon,” Covacs grumbled.

“I’ll find a fight ring for us right away,” Reinhold gave Covacs a punch on the arm. “Besides, the skies have had plenty good decorating its horizon, lately,” He ruffled the hair of the singular woman, standing next to him- not in uniform, but dressed to impress him anyways in her flight jacket- and miniskirt. “Linda Falkenstein, the Lady in Red. What were you at, eleven?”

“Nine,” Linda said modestly, her cheeks turning red as her chosen paint on her aircraft. She was used to fame- she performed at air shows even at a young age, and was the daughter of a famed Imperial ace, but she preferred to show her achievements, and certainly not to lie about them.

“You’ll catch up to oldy Goldy in no time,” Bartholomeu said, his hand joining Reinholds in patting her head. He raised his glass. “A toast to Major Reinhold Roth-Vogel, for bringing us back into the Luftwaffe, and for buying the drinks for once!”

”Prosit!” The assembled men stuffing the hall full raised their glasses, and a few deigned to throw them into the air and spray all around with wine. Dhegyar paratroopers, probably. Such was a tradition, in giving luck to a unit before battle.

As the mingling continued, though, Linda bid the man of the hour to come outside. He followed- though the troubled look on her face meant it was certain to not be in the same light as the mood in the beer hall.

They were alone here- the side streets of Zeissenburg were safe, but dull, especially at this hour.

“Rein,” Linda said, her voice trying to crack but failing.
>>
“I know,” Reinhold said, sighing, and leaning on the wall. “It’s about Eidan, isn’t it.”

“Of course it is.”

“It’s not perfect, Linda,” he explained again, “but we’ve got one another. I want to see how it goes.”

How it goes,” Linda choked despondently, “I’ve known you for so long, half my life. I’m one of the best pilots alive. I’ve crossed countries for you, dodged death, every win I’ve had I’ve thought of what you’d think. I’d give you everything you wanted,” She opened her jacket, unbuttoned her shirt and spread the top open wide- a lacy black brassiere barely contained her. “My breasts are bigger than hers, even…what don’t I have, Rein? Why would you stay with some squid-breathed twit who doesn’t know the first thing about you when I ask? How much has she tried to discover about how much you are? What does she care compared to me?”

Reinhold only sighed. He didn’t have an answer to that. Not one she would be satisfied with. Their relationship was of a different nature than what Linda thought was good.

Linda let her arms by her side. “Promise me.”

“Promise you what?”

“You don’t have to leave her right away. You don’t have to stay with me forever if you don’t want to,” Linda’s fists clenched, “But I deserve a chance. Soon. Within the year. Make her accept it.”

“Linda-“

“You’ve told me to wait so many times. If she really holds you so dear she can wait too, damn it!” Linda swore and snapped her head to the side. “Rein…please. Before the next we go somewhere. If for no other reason than that you distract me. I can’t help it.”

Reinhold sighed, and embraced his childhood friend, this tomboyish, scruffy pilot. “Alright. I promise. I’ll talk with her about it, and we can figure something out.”

“…”

“Come on back, now,” Reinhold let her go, “There’s plenty of guys waiting and plenty of drinks. Maybe you’ll find somebody better than me if you look hard enough.”

“I won’t,” Linda said crossly, “I only want what’s best for you, Rein. And what’s best for you is me.” She walked past him, and he lingered, in thought.

Maybe. Maybe she was best for him, but did he want what was best for him? He still closed his eyes, and saw blue and brown staring coolly back at him. Oh, baby, he thought sometimes, couldn’t she have been lying then, when she said she’d never see her again?

-----
>>
Strosstadt, Strossvald

Once more, Hilda passed time by fishing- gazing over the lake, and all the creatures within. She did not feel much inclined to swimming right now- her belly had grown larger, and cumbersome. The little ones within were so lively. So eager to be born. Yet they had to wait…and Hilda had grown accustomed to waiting, now.

Familiar steps approached.

“It’s you.” Hilda said tonelessly without looking.

“If it isn’t my favorite pregnant lady.” Gerovic sat next to her, “I don’t know any others, but you’d still be my favorite anyways. How are you feeling?”

“Bloated. Hungry. Lightheaded.” Hilda listed off drily, “You’re still motivated, then. I hope none of that was interesting in that way.”

“We can’t have our good days without our bad ones,” Gerovic reached a hand out, “Do you want a back rub? I’m quite good at them.”

“Keep your hands to yourself.”

“Alright, fine then,” Gerovic shrugged. “The offer’s always there.”

The man somehow wasn’t scaring the fish away, Hilda thought. The world seemed to love him. He had an attraction to him that was hard to explain…but his hunger dissuaded her. She had learned well the lessons of caution.

“No boyfriend yet?” Gerovic asked.

“No.” Probably not until she was not so visibly pregnant, either.

“Hmm…” Gerovic put his hand to her stomach- the one place he was allowed. “A girl and a boy.” He sounded so certain, but Hilda felt a catch in her breath. “Did you want two of the same?”

“No,” Hilda sighed, “I just don’t…want to see their father in a man. He had goodness to him, but…I could not be with him. I would rather not see him, or think of him.”

“The past doesn’t go away just because you don’t like it,” Gerovic offered innocently. “…You’ll have plenty more sons, anyways. Speaking of.” He took her hand, and pulled away the glove upon it. Before she could react, he slipped a glittering gold ring upon her finger.

“What.”

“It’s a gift, not a proposal, sweetheart,” Gerovic said with a big grin, “Men won’t believe you’re a widow without a ring.”

“Oh.”

“There’s a catch.” Hilda glared, but Gerovic smiled. “I’m heading off soon, for a while. If you aren’t hitched by the time I get back,” Gerovic pointed, “You’re mine. I’m claiming that burnt up, cut up, muscled up and milky-tittied mommy, so if you don’t want that to happen, you’d better get a move on, you hear?”

Hilda blinked at him with cold eyes. “An empty threat. I don’t have to take that deal at all.”

“We’ll see about that,” Gerovic stood up, “get a move on, cutie. You don’t know when I might come back and snatch you, after all.”

He walked away with a goofy step, and Hilda rolled her eyes as she returned to her fishing. Her glove went back on…though the ring did not come off.

-----
>>
>>5388517
So anons spurned the childhood friend in the other quest? What a disgrace.
>>
Paelli, The Memorial Fields

Not so long ago, these fields had been full of battle. Of soldiers, of war machines. So recently that many of the ones here must have fought alongside you just a short time past. Yet at the same time, you hoped, maybe in vain, that you would not have this particular sort of memorial- a last stand, perhaps. You’d rather not leave one, not so quickly. Especially if it were against a much greater enemy than the Kalleans- the Reich, or Caelussians, whenever they came.

“What are you thinking of?” Maddalyn asked.

“I’m thinking of what’s to come,” you said, “I’ve hopeful intentions.”

Some more quiet.

“I’ve met with the dead, recently,” you let out, “These fields have me thinking of them, again. Of what they left behind.”

“Richter…”

“In a dream, I should say,” you specified, “I met my uncle Heller. I spoke with him. In your studies, in those tomes…do they say anything about the realm of the dead? Have you been there?”

“No…” Maddalyn held your arm, “All that’s said about it is that it is not a place for the living. It is unreachable. A person’s presence dissipates when they die. Some believe it goes back to the Earth, descending. Others think that it goes to another realm of the dead. All agree that the living no longer interact with the dead, in any way. No matter the temptation to believe otherwise. You wouldn’t have actually been speaking with the dead, Richter.”

“They know things I have no knowledge of, though…” you said, “Might they be even the smallest bit true?”

“They can be true,” Maddalyn said, “But it isn’t them. Remember that. Not unless you’re dealing with something that is not recorded…perhaps forbidden. For good reason.”

Perhaps.

“Enough about the dead,” you put your hand to Maddalyn’s stomach, “The future, like I said…our children, you’ve said you want them to have a noble education…”

“It is for the best, and necessary.”

“I’d rather we take the place of tutors where we can,” you said, “I don’t want there to be distance in our family. Not if we can help it… I want to be as much a part of their lives as possible.”

Maddalyn hesitated. “No, that’s alright. Where we can. But those sorts of good intentions can spoil a child.”

“I only want to avoid the sort of separation like that between you and your family.”

“…”

“I want to know about that.”

“About what?” Maddalyn looked warily to you.

“You ought to know how much I trust you. My loyalty.” You’d rescued her. Fought alongside her. Kissed her. Made love. Yet she still hid things from you- and you could accept some of that. Not quite all of it. You needed to be let in just a little. “Why you and your father, your sister, what drove you apart. Was it your mother’s death?”
>>
“…No.” Maddalyn closed her eyes, and looked down. “…I’ll tell you. Just that one piece. My sister…you know by now, what her arms look like. I did that.”

“She told me as such. She wanted me to ask you why.”

Maddalyn exhaled long and slow. “She angered me. She spoke to the Hermit of something, and he did as he always did. Enlighten the curious. Then she shared what he told with…father.”

“What did she say?”

“I can’t tell you that.” Maddalyn said quickly, then continued. “Please…but. I found out what she had said. It wasn’t an accident. I was hateful. I wanted her to suffer. I was young, and I had this power to do something nobody else would…I made her scream in agony, and I delighted in what I thought was suitable punishment. My father found out. He decided then…that he did not know me. He thought me a monster.” She opened her eyes and stared at the steel of the top of the tank. “He was right. No apologies could ever make up for what I did to Mathilda. She believes she’s lost her chance at love because of me. I’ve tried to make things right…I’m still trying. I don’t know if I can.” She was quiet. “…Richter?”

You wrapped your arms around her. “We can make it right,” you reassured her, “I know no monster. I only know you. My wife. And I love you.”

Maddalyn slowly put her arms around you as well. “…I love you too.”

You stood there still, in the mist, in that battlefield- that looked so old, despite its youth.

Pondered when it would be but dust, and a new memorial created over top of it in a new war.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcCsuovmNRc
In those moments, you realized something- a premonition, earlier- an unasked for gift from the Demiphantom, perhaps. In but a moment, you saw things to come, or perhaps a vague implication.

The invasion of Vynmark by Twaryi would begin soon. In but a week. It was enough for the possibility of any IO operation there to be canceled- but you did not see how that war ended. The brief premonition did not place importance upon it.

Even though the Major had warned of an assignment in the coming months- it was delayed by another event, just before you might have gone. The conflict between Plisseau and its breakaway state escalated- and the Archduchy intervened, though it did not draw up its full strength to attack. The Blumlands Special Mechanized Force Demi-Battalion found its first service in that war- though it had the luck to find a rather quiet and idle length of front line, reserved for use against a force that was hesitant to commit itself. After many weeks of restless and bizarre peace, its first blooding came- the sole battle that was your unit’s significant participation in the war, near its end.

Your unit’s first notable victory.
>>
A month after that, and a couple of much smaller follow ups to that battle later, a ceasefire was signed- Plissea considered the loss of Almizea to be acceptable compared to the potential loss of even more territory. With a battle ring on its unit standard now, the Blumlands Special Mechanized Force Demi-Battalion could be considered properly hardened- losses taken, replaced, rather than a cadre green men, and the Template Soldiers- who had proven themselves capable indeed, even if they were not the majority of the unit at that time.

Anya had regretted that she could not be with your unit, but she was still in the midst of education- training- becoming better than she had ever been. There had been trust that you would survive, would triumph- but just as her cast had come off by then and she was regaining strength in that arm, slowly, steadily enough not to harm it again- she was already yearning to return. She would not, though, not until she was properly commissioned as Lieutenant.

While the unit was home and the IO was still reorganizing the operation you and the Demi-Battalion would be going on- to aid United Pohjanazk in their troubles with Trelan, amongst other things- there was a stay at home.

Maddalyn had been pregnant for a few months- but it did not show. Not yet. You wouldn’t be able to see her belly grow either, with what was being planned for you. A shame, but duty was duty. While you were back, though, Hilda gave birth to twins- a girl and a boy, named Kaja and Lukas. It was good that she had one of each, you thought- but Hilda confided quietly, uncertainly- that she feared the boy growing into a shadow of his father- and you were not anxious to see Lukas become Bertram, either…

Too soon, you were off with the unit to Pohjanazk- to both train, fight, and represent the Archduchy’s interest in the new nation’s future. Though it was what was deemed a Social Republic- that it was aligned against the Grossreich was what was considered more important than such. The Social Republic was off to a rocky start- and its neighbor Trelan was dissatisfied. Dissatisfaction that had to be dissuaded by force against incursions and posturing, for now, but assuredly greater force later. Your time in a place where people did not speak your tongue proved to be a good cushion for what would come- Pohjanazk spoke several languages, but thankfully one of Pohjanazk’s minority ethnicities did speak New Nauk.
>>
You would not be home to witness the birth of your first child, your son, Wilhelm Von Tracht. Neither would Von Metzeler be present when his daughter Ilise was born. Regrettable- but both of you were joyous. Your crews toasted the births on a singular day of celebration, that could be afforded.

Von Neubaum brought one of his women along- heavily pregnant. That you were closer to the birth of a bastard than your son brought retroactive agitation, but the woman and her child were given the favor of pity- and Von Neubaum even seemed that he might have favored his daughter, Kassia, illegitimate as she was.

With that, you forgot all about it- your subconscious dismissing it as a waking dream. It would all happen- eventually.

Or were you yet to wake up?

Heh heh heh…enjoy it while it lasts, Richter Von Tracht. You were born at exactly the wrong time…

-----

In days to come- in the heart of the Reich

A persistent knock at the door of the Falkenstein home- an hour from midnight, when the lights were all out, save one. It kept up a steady beat, until the light began to spread- whereupon, it departed, fading into the quiet night moments before the door finally opened.

“Hello?” Linda Falkenstein called into the night, looking left and right, “…Hello..?” She looked down at the doorstep and saw…a basket. With a baby sleeping, swaddled in blankets there, a silver chain of something wrapped up. “Who..?” She picked up the basket, and the baby woke up- but was calm, curious- the little boy’s features looked familiar, but his eyes were odd- a vivid blue in one, and a deep brown in the other. “Mom? Dad?” She called back into the house, bringing the baby with her and setting his basket on the table, as she reached into his blankets for the chain- attached was a note, and a shining silver medallion- with a lion’s head over a cross emblem upon it.

I am Eike Douran Von Lowenkreuz, the note read in curling, artfully written script, My mother noble born and my father a warrior. My heritage must come to me when I am ready- and this medallion is proof of my blood. I am entrusted into this house’s care, if they will have me.

…Douran?

“Yes, dear?” Linda’s mother came down the stairs- and saw the baby. “Oh! Ah…” She went to him, and picked him up in her arms, “Hm, I suppose we should call the police and see…”

“We’ll take care of him,” Linda said before she had thought about it. “He wasn’t left here because he has a home to go to…”

Her mother smiled at her and shook her head. “Don’t be in such a hurry to be a mother, dear. We’ll take care of him for a few days and see what can be done…if that step even has to be taken.”

Ultimately, though, it would.

-----
>>
Thanks all for reading and playing thus far. It's been a journey. For now, Panzer Commander Quest is over- though it will continue on.

I'll take any questions that are desired while the thread's still up. The Skirmish will probably be run in a bit less than a month- and there'll be the Vitelian side story after that. My not-so-secret ambition is to make a game out of all this, what with all the setting and character work, but that's long term. And will probably require that I quit my job to devote time to it.

I'll also try and get the requests of last thread out if I can, but if not, I'll be posting them to my twitter or something.
>>
>>5388570
Thanks for running! I've been playing this quest almost from the start, and it's been a lot of fun. Thank you for being in my life.

And welcome to the exclusive club of QMs who actually finished their quest!
>>
>>5388570
>>5388570
>For now, Panzer Commander Quest is over- though it will continue on.
No way, I really hope this doesn’t mean over-over. There’s so much story left to tell! I really want to see where it goes and what becomes of everyone.

Can’t wait for the continuations. Thanks for running this! It’s been incredible.
>>
>>5388565
Yeah, I was disappointed too. I wish I was around back then.
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>>5388592
>No way, I really hope this doesn’t mean over-over. There’s so much story left to tell! I really want to see where it goes and what becomes of everyone.
Oh, don't worry, Richter and pals' story isn't over yet. There's still so much tragedy to unfold, and a debt to repay. It's more a pause and a time skip than an ending point. I wouldn't dare put you through the work of setting up your unit and its command only for you to never get to play with it.
>>
>>5388605
>so much tragedy to unfold
Can we please just have a rom-com about Wilhelm and all the girls instead? Please?
>>
>>5388605
Oh thank goodness. Not so hyped for incredible tragedy, but very glad for it to continue.
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>>5388607
Unironically I would be so down for this. In the future after we resolve a lot of things of course.
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>>5388570
>You did it Richter von Tracht, you finally became the Panzer Commander!™
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>>5388649
the Panzer Commander Quest*
>>
File: intermission crab.png (7 KB, 99x61)
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7 KB PNG
Welp, it's been a trip. Til the next one, lads.

>>5388570
>It's finally time to get off Mr tanq's wild ride
No! You can't make me!
My god though, thanks for the work boss. Having been forced yet deeper into imageboard hermitism over the years, I can say for certain the only thing bringing me back to 4chan at this point are these threads and I'm grateful for every minute of it.
What kind of a game are you thinking? I don't play vidya personally, only tabletop shit, but the process of making either is a huge undertaking and you have my pre-earned respect for considering it.
Presumably all updates for the return of the main quest and the side stories will still appear in the usual places on your twitter until then?
Out of curiousity, and because I've asked before and forgotten do you have any works outside of the /qst/ format that we can read/expect to read eventually? I'd love to keep tabs on any stuff you put to paper in future, if there's some means to do so without compromising your anonymity.

>>5388649
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kahoWJOsjoc
>>
>>5388680
>What kind of a game are you thinking?
A tactics rpg, given the focus on characters and their progression rather than nation and politics. Probably nothing too revolutionary, considering I'll most likely be alone in any development. Group projects just don't seem to work out too well for me- and I really don't have the money to throw away on something I'd likely be expected to sell for very cheap if for money whatsoever.
>Presumably all updates for the return of the main quest and the side stories will still appear in the usual places on your twitter until then?
Such is the case, yes.
Speaking of it seems I misjudged what people wanted from fanservice because that repost of the SNS suit got absolutely no engagement. Not that twitter bullshit is important whatsoever and the sooner it vanishes into history the better, but I try and read into what people want.
>do you have any works outside of the /qst/ format that we can read/expect to read eventually?
Nah, not really. I've never considered myself an author so I wouldn't try and enter that already crowded arena. If /qst/ dies I might migrate to another site, but thus far, even though it's slowed quite a bit, /qst/ is still plenty alive for me, at least.
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>>5388607
>Can we please just have a rom-com about Wilhelm and all the girls instead? Please?
The world he's to live in has yet to be decided, after all.
Besides, what of his potential siblings? A blaze that consumes a forest can still regrow with new life, after all.
And we know there's a blaze a coming.
>>
>>5388708
>no engagement for the SNS suit
I appreciated it, but I run a christian minecraft server twitter account and I can't let people know I live like this.

Congratulations on the quest though! I do appreciate all the effort that you put in to this, especially the art.
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>>5388570
Thanks for running tanq. Been playing this since the first Blumlands arc at least so it's been great seeing this go strong over the years. Even if this doesn't have the sheer popularity of other long running stuff I'd say very few others have had as much of a fleshed out setting as this one.

Seems there's going to be a pretty large timeskip when we get back to Richter huh?
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>>5388570
May we know at this point why Metzeler needed to knock up Klaudia so fast?

>I've never considered myself an author so I wouldn't try and enter that already crowded arena.
Guess I'm not asking when panzer commander: the novel series is coming out then
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God Damn.
I fucking LOVE this quest.
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>>5389168
>May we know at this point why Metzeler needed to knock up Klaudia so fast?
At this point such a thing is still an interrogation to be made in character and potentially addressed there, so no. If the narrative were coming to an end rather than being resumed later, I might say, but I also value there being mysteries without a definitive answer given in fiction- which isn't to say there is no answer, that would be lazy, but that it's something deduced rather than told outright.
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>>5388565
>>5388604
Nah Owl 3 best Luftpanzer girl, though Linda> Eidan her having to foster her crush's bastard must be even more salt in the wounds though

>>5388570
Thanks for running. Couple of random thoughts/questions:

-We probably need a better name for our unit when we return, 'Blumlands Special Mechanized Force Demi-Battalion' is way too convoluted to use in daily conversation.

-How'd a fight between Mabel and the Major go?

-Hope Wielzci finds his family alive, don't want to end up like Wrath leader there. Also from our meeting with the Kaiser I think Wladyslaw and Henrik would get along if they met.

-What's Eike's surname on paper, I assume Rein would definitely claim him as his, consequences be damned.
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>>5389419
A good waifu you can keep is better than a perfect one you can’t
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>>5389419
>We probably need a better name for our unit when we return, 'Blumlands Special Mechanized Force Demi-Battalion' is way too convoluted to use in daily conversation.
It is your unit. If you'd like to refer to it unofficially (or officially, with necessary paperwork) by another name, you're free to do so.

>How'd a fight between Mabel and the Major go?
It'd depend on the circumstances of the fight. No assassin of any talent would try to work with face to face brute force alone, but if they were matched in a straight up brawl? The Major is older- in her later thirties, roughly- while Mabel is somewhat younger and only around thirty or so, but the Major is also much physically larger and taller by a significant degree- Mabel is a rather average sized woman. In a straight up physical contest, there'd be no question.
Though neither of them actually rely on such a thing. I'd tentatively say the Major in most scenarios by virtue of experience, though.

>What's Eike's surname on paper, I assume Rein would definitely claim him as his, consequences be damned.
Legally speaking, unless Reinhold did claim him (after the realization of the consequences of a one night stand), he would be Eike Falkenstein, until it was decided to inform him of the truth his lineage. Being the last legitimate member of her house (other members having had their rights and titles stripped), Winnifred Von Lowenkreuz is allowed to legitimize whatever progeny she wishes, despite a lack of marriage status with the father. Thus, Eike Von Lowenkreuz is the legitimate heir to the household- once he is enlightened of it. If Reinhold were to adopt him, he would be Roth-Vogel, but Eike would always have the right to his true name and title- and cannot shed it.
In which case of choosing to keep his old surname, he would be Eike Douran Von Lowenkreuz Roth-Vogel (as nobility titles take precedence in shared names). A real mouthful.



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